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Charles-François Daubigny's The Banks of the Oise: A Masterpiece of Plein Air Painting

 
The Banks of the Oise by Charles-Francois Daubigny Browse the article The Banks of the Oise by Charles-Francois Daubigny

The Banks of the Oise by Charles-Francois Daubigny

Charles-François Daubigny's The Banks of the Oise (1859), was painted en plein air by which the artist achieved a fresh effect that could not be matched in the confines of a studio.

Daubigny's naturalistic approach to landscape involved painting in the open air. Prior to the early 1840s, artists composed their landscapes in the studio from sketches and from memory. Advances in lightweight easels and portable art materials allowed an artist to work outdoors and record the effects of light, shadow, and atmosphere from direct observation.

For more on Impressionist paintings, artists, and art history, see:
  • Impressionism
  • Vincent van Gogh
  • Claude Monet
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Debra N. Mancoff is an art historian and lecturer and the author of numerous books on nineteenth-century European and American paintings. She is a scholar in residence at the Newberry Library.