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Learn MoreShepherd and Shepherdess at the Gate, Bazincourt by Camille PIssarro
- This unique Pissarro painting takes the form of a fan
- Inspired by Japanese art, Pissarro began using this form in the 1870s, giving it new life
- This example displays Pissarro's signature subject, the picturesque French countryside
- Many of these exceptional fan paintings are already in museums such as the Musée d'Orsay
- Get complete item description here
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1830-1903 | French
Berger et bergère à la barrière, Bazincourt
(Shepherd and Shepherdess at the Gate, Bazincourt)
Stamped "C.P." (lower left)
Gouache and wash on paper
Among Camille Pissarro’s most unique artworks, this fan painting transforms a decorative object into a luminous Impressionist landscape. Displaying one of his iconic rural scenes, this rare masterpiece offers one of the most singular and delightful ways of experiencing Pissarro’s celebrated vision.
Inspired. . .
1830-1903 | French
Berger et bergère à la barrière, Bazincourt
(Shepherd and Shepherdess at the Gate, Bazincourt)
Stamped "C.P." (lower left)
Gouache and wash on paper
Among Camille Pissarro’s most unique artworks, this fan painting transforms a decorative object into a luminous Impressionist landscape. Displaying one of his iconic rural scenes, this rare masterpiece offers one of the most singular and delightful ways of experiencing Pissarro’s celebrated vision.
Inspired by Japanese art and encouraged by Edgar Degas, Pissarro began experimenting with fans in the late 1870s, exhibiting 12 examples at the 1879 Impressionist exhibition alongside his paintings. What was once a decorative object became, in Pissarro’s hands, a highly inventive work of art. Other artists such as Gauguin and later Bonnard also explored the fan format, but Pissarro perhaps embraced it most fully, helping transform the fan into one of the era’s most elegant experiments in modern composition.
In this example, the sweeping crescent shape of the fan offered Pissarro a compositional challenge unlike the traditional canvas, allowing him to unfold the landscape in a panoramic arc. Figures gather along a rustic fence, drawing the viewer into the foreground while the countryside opens behind them. The result is intimate yet expansive, offering Pissarro a place to reimagine the countryside he loved.
Fewer than 100 fans by modern artists of this period are believed to exist, making each surviving example exceptionally rare. Comparable examples by Pissarro have gone for impressive sums at auction and now reside in leading museum collections worldwide, including the Musée d’Orsay, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Van Gogh Museum and the Brooklyn Museum. The importance of these works continues to receive institutional attention today, with the Musée d’Orsay showcasing an exhibition of 17 Impressionist fans this year.
Known as the "Father of Impressionism," Camille Pissarro was the only painter to exhibit in all eight of the Impressionist exhibitions. His revolutionary approach to painting and thought-provoking compositions had a profound effect on his contemporaries and the future of modern art, and his works can be found in many of the most important museums and private collections throughout the world.
This work will be included in the forthcoming Camille Pissarro Digital Catalogue Raisonné, currently being prepared under the sponsorship of the Wildenstein Plattner Institute.
Circa 1885
Paper: 15" high x 25" wide (38.10 x 63.50 cm)
Frame: 17" high x 27 1/2" wide x 1" deep (43.18 x 69.85 x 2.54 cm)
Provenance:
Jeanne & Alexandre Bonin Collection, Paris (the artist's daughter and son-in-law) by descent from the artist circa 1903
Sale of the above, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, June 26, 1931, lot 22
Madame Zimmerman Collection, Paris (acquired at the above sale)
Private collection, Paris (by descent from the above)
Sale of the above, Sotheby's, London, April 4, 1990, lot 107
Private collection, acquired at the above sale through Legatt Brothers, London
M.S. Rau, New Orleans
Literature:
L.-R. Pissarro & L. Venturi, Camille Pissarro, son art–son oeuvre, Vol. I, Paris, 1939, no. 1632 (illustrated Vol. II, pl. 309)
M-J. Pellé, Les Éventails de Camille Pissarro, Paris, 1990, no. 22 (illustrated p. 24)

| Maker: | Pissarro, Camille |
| Period: | 1816-1918 |
| Origin: | France |
| Type: | Paintings |
| Style: | Impressionism |
| Depth: | 1.0 in. (2.54 cm) |
| Width: | 27.5 in. (69.85 cm) |
| Height: | 17.0 in. (43.18 cm) |
| Canvas Width: | 25.000 in. (63.5 cm) |
| Canvas Height: | 15.000 in. (38.1 cm) |
At M.S. Rau, we are committed to building a long-term, rewarding relationship with each and every client. That’s why your purchase is backed by our 125% guarantee.
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