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EVENING AT OPTEVOZ (LE SOIR, OPTEVOZ)
EVENING AT OPTEVOZ (LE SOIR, OPTEVOZ)
Charles-François Daubigny
French, 1817 - 1878
EVENING AT OPTEVOZ (LE SOIR, OPTEVOZ), circa 1849
signed Daubigny (lower right); signed and inscribed: à mon ami Giacomelli Daubigny (lower left)
oil on panel
12 1/8 by 20 3/4 in. (30.8 by 52.7 cm)
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  • View larger version of this thumbnail image. EVENING AT OPTEVOZ (LE SOIR, OPTEVOZ)
  • View larger version of this thumbnail image. EVENING AT OPTEVOZ (LE SOIR, OPTEVOZ)
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Evening at Optevoz occupies an important position within Daubigny’s development: a small but eloquent witness to his pursuit of immediacy, tonal subtlety, and atmospheric truth. In its calm intimacy and painterly freedom, the panel anticipates the qualities that would later inspire younger artists—including Monet (1840-1926) and Pissarro (1830-1903)—and secure Daubigny’s reputation as a crucial bridge between the Barbizon school and Impressionism.

Provenance

Hector Giacomelli, Paris (and his sale, hôtel Drouot, Paris, 13 April 1905, lot 10, as Le Soir, paysage, étude d'après nature)

Private Collection, Florida

Exhibited

London, Couper Gallery, De Géricault à Daubigny : some aspects of the 19th century, December 1962- January 1963, no. 11, as Bord de rivière: le soir

Literature

Robert Hellebranth, Charles-François Daubigny 1817-1878, Morges, Matute, 1976, p. 165, no. 508, illustrated

Catalogue note

Painted circa 1849, Evening at Optevoz records a pivotal moment in Charles-François Daubigny’s early career, when sustained observation of the countryside was guiding him away from academic landscape conventions toward a more immediate and atmospheric mode of painting. Executed in oil on panel, the work presents a tranquil riverside at dusk: low marshy banks and reflective water in the foreground give way to gently rising fields and clustered trees, while a pale crescent moon emerges in a softly modulated sky. Two small figures seated near the water’s edge introduce a discreet human presence without disrupting the prevailing stillness. The composition is deliberately open and horizontal, drawing the eye laterally across the surface, while tall, slender trees punctuate the middle distance and anchor the scene.

 

Daubigny’s brushwork is characteristically free and economical. The foliage is rendered through rapid, broken strokes, allowing the ground tone of the panel to breathe through the paint, while the sky is built up in thin, luminous veils of grey, blue, and warm rose. Reflections in the water are suggested rather than described, reinforcing the fleeting quality of twilight. The restricted palette—dominated by greens, ochres, and silvery blues—creates a hushed chromatic harmony appropriate to evening light, a motif that fascinated the artist throughout his career. Such effects of atmosphere, rather than topographical specificity, form the painting’s true subject.

 

The dedication at lower left—à mon ami Giacomelli—links the panel to Hector Giacomelli (1822-1904), a close friend and fellow landscape painter associated with the Barbizon circle. This personal inscription, together with the modest scale and the description in Giacomelli’s 1905 sale as an étude d’après nature, suggests the work functioned as a private study rather than a finished Salon picture. Yet its sensitivity and compositional assurance reveal Daubigny already refining the idiom that would make him one of the leading interpreters of the French countryside in the mid-nineteenth century.

 

Born in Paris in 1817 into a family of artists, Daubigny trained initially as a decorator and illustrator before turning decisively to landscape painting in the 1840s. Around the time this panel was made, he was travelling extensively along the rivers of the Île-de-France and Dauphiné, working outdoors and absorbing the example of painters such as Corot (1796-1875) and Théodore Rousseau (1812-1867), while forging his own quieter, more lyrical vision of nature. The village of Optevoz, in eastern France, was among the rural locales that attracted him for its unspoiled banks and shifting light. These early river scenes prefigure the celebrated views of the Oise and Seine he would later paint from his studio-boat Le Botin, which in the 1850s and 1860s placed him at the forefront of plein-air practice.

 

Evening at Optevoz thus occupies an important position within Daubigny’s development: a small but eloquent witness to his pursuit of immediacy, tonal subtlety, and atmospheric truth. In its calm intimacy and painterly freedom, the panel anticipates the qualities that would later inspire younger artists—including Monet (1840-1926) and Pissarro (1830-1903)—and secure Daubigny’s reputation as a crucial bridge between the Barbizon school and Impressionism.

 

This note was written by Elsa Dikkes.

 

 

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