The Promenade

Getty Museum

The Promenade

Creator

Pierre-Auguste Renoir

French Artist · 1841–1919

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> The artist who uses the least of what is called imagination will be the greatest. > > --Pierre-Auguste Renoir With Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir helped found Impressionism, freeing painting from having to tell a story. Artists could simply capture what they saw. The son of a tailor in Limoges, Renoir saved the money he earned from painting china, fans, and window shades to move to Paris. G

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Date
1870
Medium
Oil on canvas
Culture
French
Department
Paintings
Institution
Getty Museum

What Pierre-Auguste Renoir himself titled this painting is unknown, but *La Promenade* is in part an homage to earlier artists whom he greatly admired. Renoir had spent the previous summer painting outdoors with Claude Monet, who encouraged him to move toward a lighter, more luminous palette and to indulge his penchant for luscious, feathery brushwork. Here Renoir retained something of Gustave Courbet's green-and-brown palette while choosing his subject from the sensual, lighthearted garden jaunts of eighteenth-century painters such as Jean-Antoine Watteau and Jean-Honoré Fragonard, whose works he had studied in the Louvre. Unlike the images of seduction created by his predecessors, Renoir's is a fleeting moment caught by chance--middle-class Parisians immersed in nature, possibly a local park, not set before a studio backdrop. The dappled light filtering through the foliage would become a trademark of Renoir's finest Impressionist works of the 1870s and 1880s. He used a thin, oily paint mix, his glazes here floating into each other to create depth.

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