We look at the superb art produced in Europe’s art colonies before World War One.
In France, painters like Millet and Rousseau congregated in the forest at Barbizon, while English, Scots and Americans went to the waterside location at Grez-sur-Loing. Van Gogh tried to set up a colony in Arles, while Gauguin was on the Brittany coast at Pont-Aven. Fishing villages like St. Ives and Newlyn dominated English art colonies, and it was a similar story at Skagen at Denmark; fishing and the sea made great subject matter; the lives of the fisherfolk were always a strong motif.
Often based around an inn, but nearly always near seas and rivers, some of Europe and America’s finest artists painted together. Whistler and Alexander Harrison from the USA, Stanhope Forbes and Christopher Wood from the UK, P. S. Krøyer and Anna Ancher from Denmark, Daubigny and Bernard from France.
Inspiration flowed between them all in scenic and dramatic locations.
This course is part of The Oxford Experience summer school, held at Christ Church.