The images and information presented below are for the instruction of students and scholarly research.
Alfred Sisley
(1839-1899)
La Grand Rue, Argentuil
Marketplace at Marley
The Landscaper
If you were to
take a look at the French countryside and let your eyes
relax, ever so slightly, your eyes would create the same
effect that Alfred Sisley created on canvas. To view the
works of Sisley is almost like viewing a photograph
through a wet pane of glass--it looks real, but slightly
distorted. For this reason, Sisley is considered one of
the original tour de force's in Impressionism and
landscape painting.
Sisley, a Parisian-born to English parents (though by
his definition, not French, not English, but both),
found little commercial success in his lifetime as a
painter. Born to a wealthy family, Sisley was originally
sent to the America's to study business. However, he
soon tired of it, and his family afforded the
opportunity for him to study at the Atelier Gleyre in
Paris in 1862. There, he was able to study with the
likes of Monet and Renoir, with whom he became friends
and worked alongside and founded Impressionism. Though
he exhibited a number of times in many salons and
galleries, Sisley's work generally went unnoticed
while he was alive.
The Church at Morey
Flood at Port Marley
His ouvre consists
strictly of landscapes in oil, nearly 900 in all; Sisley
rarely strayed unto painting anything else. For this
reason, a still-life Sisley may be in existence and
unidentified. Less than a dozen still life's or
portraiture's have been credited to Sisley to this day.
"The Forge at Mary-le-Roi" (1875) is one of the few
exceptions to this rule. This painting features men in a
barn forging iron—their
features are undefined, and the barn is warranted the
most detail. Unlike the intentions of other painters,
Sisley did not try to use this scene to make a political
or social statement, but merely painted it as it was.
The Forge at Mary-le-Roi
One certain way to
identify a Sisley work, would be to take careful notice
of the scenery and certain details. Most commonly, his
signature appears as "Sisley" in the lower right hand
corner of his paintings. Sisley had a fascination with
the sky, and his landscapes are dominated by this
fascination. The sky in almost all of Sisley's work
takes on an almost ethereal value--his color palette is
true to life, as "The Saint-Martin Canal" (1872) shows.
Sisley used color and light to indicate the weather and
time of day in his paintings. He also produced many
landscapes of snow covered fields and country homes, and
they way he shows light reflecting off of the snow is
magnificent. His colors have been called soft and
harmonious, and are similar to the style of painter
Camille Corot, whom Sisley was highly influenced by.
The Saint-Martin Canal
Sisley also had a
fascination with he great flood of 1876, producing many
paintings that year showing the after-effects. These
paintings exclusively featured the Loire river. Toward
the end of his life, he painted mainly near his home is
the town of Moret-sur-Loing, where he stayed until he
died of throat cancer in 1899.
Like many other artists of his time, Sisley took a hard
hit during the Franco-Prussian War - perhaps
the hardest of all. His family lost everything in their
estate, and from then on, Sisley lived a life of
hardship and poverty. It is for this reason that some of
his earlier works, perhaps treasured and rare
watercolors and etchings from the family home, could be
in existence. Some of his unfinished or unrecognized
works could have been stolen from the estate, making
them a highly valuable item. It has been documented that
he did, in fact, loose all of his paintings he was
working on at the time, which were "destroyed", and was
the beginning of his financial hardships.
Today, Sisley is still considered a "little-known"
artist, as his name does not ring with the same
familiarity of his contemporaries, Renoir and Monet. He
did not paint highly emotional political or social
scenes with complex meanings. Very rarely did Sisley
paint cityscapes or industrialization - simply ideal
country scenes. However, he made great strides in
Impressionistic landscape painting, and served as a
paint-brush wielding journalist and archived the simple
life in his time.