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Home - Collection - Curatorial Departments - Paintings - Selected Works - French Painting

Paintings : French Painting

Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot
Recollection of Mortefontaine
1864
© Musée du Louvre/A. Dequier - M. Bard
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Technical information
Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot
Recollection of Mortefontaine
1864
Oil on canvas
H. : 65 cm ; L.: 89 cm
Purchased through Napoleon III's civil list at the 1864 Salon
Attributed to the Musées Nationaux by court ruling in 1879; added to the Louvre collection in 1889
M.I. 692 bis
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Author(s)
Vincent Pomarède
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Recollection of Mortefontaine

This elegiac evocation of the ponds of Mortefontaine, near Senlis, illustrates the artist's evolution after 1850: a light, quivering touch and a hazy atmosphere. Corot may have been influenced by the blur of early landscape photographs, of which he had a wide-ranging collection.
Description

A carefully constructed recollection


In his studio the painter looks back to the ponds of Mortefontaine, near Ermenonville, which he often visited from 1850 onwards, studying the surface reflections and the play of light. This is, however, a carefully assembled recollection, bringing together all his memories. After 1850 Corot's work became lyrical and his technique deliberately more elliptical in its use of a poetically misty atmosphere. Recollection of Mortefontaine is a masterpiece from this period of his maturity.

Simple, rigorous composition


The simple rigorous compositional approach we see here is that arrived at by the 17th-century masters and learned by Corot from his teachers: in the foreground, a tree partially blocks the view, while behind it the pond stretches away into a bluish infinity merging with the sky. The gradually emerging atmosphere of spellbinding melancholy is created with a restricted palette in which the pale blues of sky and water harmonize with the browns and greens of the vegetation. The morning light effects have vanished. Compositional balance is achieved via the dissymmetry between the uncluttered right-hand side and, on the left, the three girls who replace the habitual pagan deities.

Acquired by the state


Recollection of Mortefontaine was one of the first Corots acquired directly from the artist, in 1864. It was bought through Napoleon III's civil list and after a period at Fontainebleau it went to the Louvre in 1889.

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