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Henry Moret - Porspoder, Finistère
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Henry Moret

Porspoder, Finistère

Oil on canvas: 21.4 x 28.9 (in) / 54.3 x 73.3 (cm)
Signed lower left: Henry Moret / 1910; titled on the reverse

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HENRY MORET

Cherbourg 1856 - 1913 Paris

Ref: BX 214

                                               

Porspoder,  Finistère

 

Signed lower left: Henry Moret / 1910; titled on the reverse

Oil on canvas: 21 ⅜ x 28 ⅞ in / 54.3 x 73.3 cm

Frame size: 30 x 37½ in / 76.2 x 95.2 cm

In a Louis XIV style gilded composition frame

 

 

Provenance:

The artist;

from whom acquired by Galerie Durand-Ruel, Paris on 11th March 1911, inv. no.3499 and Durand-Ruel Archive photograph;

Durand-Ruel, New York, acquired from the above on 19th October 1911;

Brooks Reed Gallery, Boston, acquired from the above on 3rd August 1915

Galleries Maurice Sternberg, Chicago;

private collection, Texas, acquired from the above;

Sotheby’s New York, 12th May 1994, lot 148;

where acquired by a private collector, New York

 

To be included in the catalogue raisonné of the work of Henry Moret being prepared by Jean-Yves Rolland

 

 

Henry Moret’s earlier work was influenced by Gauguin, whom he met in Pont-Aven in 1888. Later he developed his own personal, powerful style which fused elements of Gauguin’s Syntheticism – flat areas of colour, bold contrasts, the power of colour to evoke emotion – with the more naturalistic approach to space and light of the Impressionists. Emile Bernard wrote of Moret: ‘He was a very gentle, likeable character; a peaceable, sincere revolutionary. I lost sight of him when I left Pont-Aven….He had turned away from our developments in synthesis and gone over to the plein air school of Monet….So far from weakening his talent he had strengthened it, rejecting theories, keeping in touch with life itself, with nature’[1].

 

Of all the members of the Pont-Aven School, Moret was the most faithful to the area. He had first visited there in the 1880s and in 1896 settled permanently in the small fishing village of Doëlan, between Pont-Aven and Lorient. Thereafter he divided his time between Brittany and Paris, where a contract with Durand-Ruel in 1895 relieved him of financial worries. Moret was enraptured by the rugged, breezy coast of Brittany, with its sparkling and fleeting light. ‘An indefatigable fisherman and huntsman, a real seadog, a first-rate shot’[2], Moret got on well with Brittany’s dignified, hardy inhabitants. 

 

Porspoder is at the western tip of the Finistère peninsula, at the mouth of the English Channel, opposite Penzance in Cornwall. Its situation is a reminder of the close historic ties between Cornwall and Brittany, not least the tin trade. Bretons, like the Cornish, are Celts and the languages are similar. The people are often fair-haired and blue-eyed, unlike the general French population. It was unsurprising that outsiders like Gauguin and Moret became so fascinated by the unique culture of the region, Gauguin in particular seeing in it a ‘pure’ society unspoiled by the tawdriness of industrialized nineteenth century France. 

 

In this painting Moret depicts local fishing boats, with their gaff-rigged, rusty-red sails, probably going out on an expedition for mackerel[3]. The channel is unusually calm, so the fishermen are using oars to speed their progress. The vivid orange and purple of the sunlit sails are contrasted with the brilliant green of the headland, where a lozenge of emerald indicates a crop planted amid the springy, wild vegetation. Wind ruffles the foreground plants, low-growing to survive the salt breeze. Despite the blue of the sea and the pink-tinged clouds that boil in the distance, Moret leaves us in no doubt that this is a landscape of constant change, an arena of nature at its most energetic and commanding. 

 

 


HENRY MORET

Cherbourg 1856 - 1913 Paris

 

 

Henry Moret was born in Cherbourg, Normandy, the son of a garrison officer. A gentle, thoughtful man and an indefatigable worker, Henry Moret discovered Brittany during his military service in 1875. Having trained at the Ecole des Beaux Arts and in the studios of Gérôme and Laurens in Paris, Moret went to Brittany in 1881, staying at Le Pouldu near Pont Aven. For the rest of his life he divided his time between Paris and Brittany, painting the landscape and rugged coastline. In 1888, while living in Pont Aven, he met Gauguin and the circle of painters who gathered around him in L’Auberge Gloanec. Moret was influenced by Gauguin’s philosophy of Syntheticism, summarized in 1890 by Maurice Denis: ‘It is well to remember that a picture before being a battle horse, a nude woman, or some anecdote, is essentially a flat surface covered with colours assembled in a certain order’. Moret’s Breton landscapes of the early 1890s have often been mistaken for those of Gauguin. In his later work Moret re-explored the more naturalistic approach of the Impressionists, using a palette dominated by blues, greens and pinks.

 

In 1893 Moret fell in love with Célina Chatenet, a dressmaker who became his wife in 1910. She helped to support him financially until a contract with Durand-Ruel in 1895 freed Moret from money worries. He exhibited at the Salon des Indépendants and the Salon d’Automne. In 1900 and 1902 Durand-Ruel showed his work in New York, along with that of Maufra and Loiseau. Following Moret’s death in 1913, Durand-Ruel held a number of posthumous exhibitions and in one catalogue Moret was described as having the ability ‘to express the Breton landscape exactly… he occupies a unique place in the evolution of art at the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century, as he has been able to fuse together two fundamentally opposing styles: the Syntheticism of Pont Aven and Impressionism’.

 

The work of Henry Moret is represented in the Musée d’Orsay, Paris; the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Quimper; Southampton City Art Gallery; the National Museums and Galleries of Wales, Cardiff; the Hermitage, St Petersburg; the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and Indianapolis Museum of Art.

 

[1] Quoted in Wladyslawa Jaworska, Gauguin and the Pont-Aven School, London 1972, pp.183-4.

[2] Moret’s landlord Monsieur Tonnerre, quoted in Judy Le Paul, Gauguin and the Impressionists at Pont-Aven, New York 1983, p.208.

[3] I am grateful to Stéphane Boyer for information on Breton fishing fleets.

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