Signac, Paul (1863-1935)
Quai de Clichy, Temps gris (Quai de Clichy, Grey Weather)
1887
Oil on canvas, 46 x 65.5 cm
Private collection
Painted in the spring of 1887, Quai de Clichy. Temps gris shows Signac at the height of his pointillist style and dates from the key moment not only in Signac’s art, but also in the development of the Neo-Impressionist movement. By the early months of 1886 Georges Seurat finished his now celebrated painting Un dimanche après-midi à l’Île de la Grande Jatte, which caused a sensation when exhibited at the Eighth (and final) Impressionist Exhibition in May 1886. Signac and Pissarro were quick to adopt the new style of painting, with Signac completing some of his earliest pointillist canvases in the area of Clichy. It was also in 1886 that the term ‘Neo-Impressionism’ was first used in an article written by the critic Félix Fénéon. It was this revolutionary chain of events that set the stage for Signac’s works executed in 1887. In the spring of that year he painted Quai de Clichy. Temps gris and a closely related composition Quai de Clichy. Soleil, now in the Baltimore Museum of Art. Running along the river Seine, the Quai de Clichy is situated in the suburb of Asnières, to the northwest of Paris, where Signac’s family moved in 1880. The varied landscape of the region – comprising both the river and factory chimneys – would provide a great source of inspiration to the young artist who was a keen sailor, and at the same time enthusiastic about science and innovation. In 1887, the year he painted the present work, Signac was joined in his painting expeditions around Clichy and Asnières by Van Gogh, who had arrived from Paris the previous year. Van Gogh’s Les Ponts d’Asnières depicts two bridges across the Seine, as seen just further up the Quai de Clichy.
Discussing the present oil and its sister-composition at the Baltimore Museum, painted shortly afterwards, Marina Feretti-Bocquillon wrote: ‘For the first, Signac set up his easel downstream from the gas plant, facing the pont d’Asnières. The gas tanks are set back from the wharf and are therefore not visible, but we can make out the plant’s coal cranes, which can also be seen in a number of other paintings by Signac and Emile Bernard. The wharf, cranes, smoke-stack, and barge all underscore the industrial character of the site. […] in the second version, Signac turned downstream toward the pont de Clichy. […] The insubstantial trees, some protected by metalwork, show that the quai de Clichy was still very new. Everything has been exactly observed, and each element conforms to the aerial photograph taken by Commander Fribourg’ (M. Feretti-Bocquillon in Signac (exhibition catalogue), op. cit., 2001, p. 128). Combining the artist’s keen observation of the riverscape with the budding pointilliste technique, Quai de Clichy. Temps gris bears testament to a pivotal moment in the development of Neo-Impressionism. (Sotheby’s)
See also:
• Asnières-sur-Seine (France) | Clichy (France)