
Alfred Sisley
比扬古的洗衣房, 1879
价格面议



作品详情
Henri Poidatz,巴黎
Georges Petit画廊,巴黎,1900年4月27日,拍品79
Georges Petit,购于上述拍卖
拍卖:Georges Petit画廊,巴黎,1921年3月4-5日,拍品113
Comte de Lanscay,巴黎
Hôtel Drouot,巴黎,1922年4月6日,拍品16
Eugène Blot,巴黎,购于上述拍卖
Dr. Arthur Charpentier,巴黎
私人收藏,瑞士,约1950年购入
私人收藏,继承自上述藏家
私人收藏,欧洲
苏富比纽约,2015年5月6日,拍品250
私人收藏,伦敦,购于上述拍卖

Alfred Sisley’s Le Lavoir de Billancourt (1879) is a superb example of the artist’s lifelong devotion to painting directly before nature, and to the quiet drama of landscape in flux. Often described as the “purest” plein air painter of the Impressionist circle, Sisley maintained an almost exclusive relationship with landscape, attending to the subtlest changes of season, weather, and time of day. His river scenes in particular have long been compared to Monet’s for their sensitivity to water—its shifting reflections, softened edges, and the way light dissolves form into atmosphere.
Painted along the Seine at Billancourt—an industrial town west of Paris—this work belongs to the sequence of views Sisley produced after the upheavals of 1871, when he moved his family first to Louveciennes and later to nearby Marly-le-Roi. The Seine valley offered him an ever-renewing motif: looping river bends, villages threaded along the banks, and a landscape marked by both history and modern life. Here, the floating washing house (a lavoir) sits low on the water, a practical structure where locals could wash clothes directly in the river for a small fee. Sisley transforms this everyday subject into an evocation of lived place, where human activity is integrated seamlessly into the broader rhythms of sky and current.
The 1870s are widely recognized as Sisley’s “golden period”—when his work speaks in a distinctly personal voice rather than under the overt influence of Corot, Courbet, or even early Monet. After ceasing to exhibit at the Salon after 1877, his compositions grew more complex and less dependent on traditional recession and linear perspective, shifting instead toward interlocking patterns and the expressive energy of his brushwork. In Le Lavoir de Billancourt, layers of pigment are built up in quick, multidirectional strokes, creating a richly textured surface saturated with color and air. This heightened spontaneity aligns with contemporary praise for Sisley’s ability to seize passing moments—clouds, breeze, and trembling foliage—so that space and light feel inseparable, and the scene remains vibrantly in motion. The painting is recorded in the François Dault Alfred Sisley: catalogue raisonné de l'oeuvre peint (1959) as no. 315.
“每幅画作皆呈现艺术家倾心之景”— Alfred Sisley
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