Umbrellas Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)
Pierre-Auguste Renoir – Umbrellas
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Painter: Pierre-Auguste Renoir
The talented French artist Auguste Renoir worked for several years on the famous painting Umbrellas. The work was begun in late 1881 and was not completed until 1886. Rain. Paris. Umbrellas. On the one hand - it is a bustle, crowding, cluster of umbrellas, and on the other - the charm and charm of the subject. The picture is watchable in the same breath, there is no complicated and intricate plot that would make you think and think in the spirit of the time.
Description of Pierre Auguste Renoir’s painting Umbrellas
The talented French artist Auguste Renoir worked for several years on the famous painting Umbrellas. The work was begun in late 1881 and was not completed until 1886.
Rain. Paris. Umbrellas. On the one hand - it is a bustle, crowding, cluster of umbrellas, and on the other - the charm and charm of the subject. The picture is watchable in the same breath, there is no complicated and intricate plot that would make you think and think in the spirit of the time. Everything is simple and easy.
The canvas depicts four characters, each carrying their own story to the world. A young mother turns around to call her children to her side. She is dressed fashionably and stylishly in the spirit of 1881.
The young woman on the left looks tired, she is returning home after a hard day’s work, and she is dressed in the spirit of 1886. This time difference is reflected by the long work on this piece.
In the center is a snub-nosed little girl who looks questioningly up at the sky to see if the rain has stopped.
The little girl is charming and has a childlike naivety and innocence about her. The picture accurately depicts the fashion of the times, and of different classes.
Renoir had long studied the styles of dresses in order to convey their style and fashion as accurately as possible. The artist used different styles to paint the characters. The two girls on the right are painted with soft, fluid brush strokes, in the spirit of Impressionism, while the characters on the left are painted in a harder and more resolute handwriting. Despite these differences, the picture looks harmonious and natural, fully corresponding to the era of the time. The subject has a special charm, which is peculiar to the pen of the master, it stands out against the background of other, no less famous artists.
The painting is in the National Museum in London, and anyone can enjoy seeing it.
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