A French Fishing Fleet with Packet Boat (Primary Title)

Eugène Boudin, French, 1824 - 1898 (Artist)

1889
French
oil on canvas
Unframed: 34 × 50 in. (86.36 × 127 cm)
Framed: 55 5/8 × 66 1/4 in. (141.29 × 168.28 cm)
83.8

The ambitious proportions of Entrance to the Port of Le Havre and A French Fishing Fleet with Packet Boat suggest that Boudin intended the two paintings for exhibition as a pair at the Salon. They figure among Boudin's most accomplished seascapes.


Le Havre is located at the mouth of the River Seine, facilitating the transportation of commercial goods to and from Paris and serving as France’s second-largest seaport by the mid-19th century. Although these developments in trade and industry reflected the country’s growing economic prosperity, Entrance to the Port of Le Havre demonstrates Boudin’s increasing concern that the replacement of sailboats by steamships would “make the sea a very monotonous place.” Behind the rowboats that cut across the foreground and the sailboats with swollen masts approaching from the center of the composition, two steamers pollute the sky with thick black smoke under the darkened clouds of an impending squall. This same motif is present in A French Fishing Fleet with Packet Boat, although the dramatic movement of the fleet of sailboats through the choppy ocean waters in this painting is lent emphasis by the tumultuously clouded sky typical of Boudin’s seascapes.
Signed lower left: "E. Boudin 1889"
Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon
Eugène Boudin: The First Impressionist, VMFA, Nov. 14, 2007-Feb. 17, 2008

Pictures by Boudin, Cezanne, Degas, Manet, Monet, Morisot, Pissarro, Renoir, Sisley, Grafton Gallery, London, Jan.-Feb. 1905, No. 1

Exposition des Oeuvres d’Eugène Boudin, Ecole Nationale des Beaux-Arts, Paris, 1899, No. 216

Société des Amis des Arts, Le Havre, 1890

Salon of 1889—see published Knyff
Image released via Creative Commons CC-BY-NC

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