Price Database
13 December 2024
Artists
Auctions
Artnet Auctions
Global Auction Houses
Galleries
Events
News
Price Database
Use the Artnet Price Database
Market Alerts
Artnet Analytics
Hidden
Buy
Browse Artists
Artnet Auctions
Browse Galleries
Global Auction Houses
Events & Exhibitions
Speak With a Specialist
Art Financing
How to Buy
Sell
Sell With Us
Become a Gallery Partner
Become an Auction Partner
Receive a Valuation
How to Sell
Search
Hidden
Fairhead Fine Art
London
Home
Artworks
Artists
Art Fairs
Camille Pissarro
(
Danish/French
, 1830–1903)
Camille Pissarro
Group de paysans,
ca. 1896
5,000 GBP
Biography
Timeline
Timeline
Pissarro was born in St Thomas in the West Indies, the son of a Créole mother and a father of Portuguese-Jewish descent. He worked as a clerk in his father’s general store until 1852 when he ran away with a Danish painter, after which his reluctant parents resigned themselves to his becoming an artist.
He arrived in Paris in 1865, in time to see the Great Exhibition at the World’s Fair, when Courbet exhibited his paintings independently. Soon after he met Corot, by whom he was deeply influenced. Yet by 1866 Corot disapproved of the way the younger landscape painters were going and was particularly severe about Pissarro’s connection with Courbet and Manet. In 1859 Pissarro met Monet and in 1863 several of his pictures were exhibited in the Salon des Refusés. From 1866-69, he worked at Pontoise on landscapes painted entirely in the open, but he could sell almost nothing and he and his family lived in the most cruel poverty.
In 1870, he fled before the German invasion, first to Brittany, and then to London. Eventually, news reached him that his house in Louveciennes had been used as a butchery by the invaders, and his store of 200 to 300 pictures used as duckboards in the muddy garden. This was a crushing blow to a man who was so passionate about his work.
In 1872 Cézanne joined him in Pontoise and worked with him, with a radical effect on his own style. In 1874 he took part in the first Impressionist Exhibition: he was the only one who exhibited in all eight, and it was he who introduced first Gauguin, then Seurat and Signac into the Impressionist Exhibitions, with constant disruption among the group. He was much influenced from 1884 by Seurat’s theories of Optical Mixture, which he used until 1888, when he declared that the method “inhibits me and hinders the development of spontaneity of sensation”. From 1895 the worsening of his eye-trouble forced him to give up working en plein air, and he painted many town views from windows in Paris. He died blind in 1903.
Pissarro was an artist of diverse talents. He is known chiefly for his oil painting, yet he also worked in gouache, pastel, drawing, etching and lithography. He is also known for his tolerance and the unity that he inspired amongst his fellow Impressionists, even in the middle of bitter disputes. In return, they gave him respect and admiration for his principles as much as for his art. His paintings can be found in almost every museum of modern art around the world.