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Jeff Matthews
2002-2012
Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841-1919)
Renoir was a French painter and a leader in the
development of the Impressionist style. Six of his
paintings hung in the First Impressionist Exhibition
in April, 1874, in Paris. Other than that, Renoir
certainly needs no introduction from me. I note
simply that he traveled in Italy between 1881 and
1883. In Naples he visited the National
Museum and the ruins of Pompeii, later making
mention of his admiration for the frescoes there.

In 1881, he painted the work shown here: The Bay of Naples, a work that shows
why the phrase “sparkling color” crops up in so many
descriptions of his works. Here, even the
centerpiece of Vesuvius is reduced to a secondary
role by the “impression” of sparkle, even glare.
(Your eyes should start to hurt if you look at this
too long, exactly as they would if you stood at the
spot in person and stared out at the bay.) The scene
appears to have been painted from the area along the
sea approximately where the Villa
Comunale ends and before you get to Mergellina. The Castel dell’Ovo is missing
either out of artistic license (castles are
notorious for not being “sparkley,” no matter how
hard you try) or because I am totally misreading the
painting (always a possibility!).
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other paintings:
Oswald Achenbach
Lois Mailou Jones
Gasparo Vanvitelli
(van Wittel)
Antonio Joli
Giacinto Gigante
Anton Pitloo
Coleman, Charles Caryl