Jean-François Raffaëlli (French, 1850-1924)
I live in Asnières and I am attracted by the strangeness that surrounds all large cities... In Asnières there is the nakedness of earthen embankments, wooden shacks inhabited by extraordinary people, skinny horses, nondescript carriages, and stray dogs. I respond to all that, it answers a need I have for sorrowful charm, a love of strange silhouettes, and, also, a vague consciousness of high philosophy. J. F. Raffaëlli, 1880 PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE NEW YORK COLLECTOR
Jean-François Raffaëlli (French, 1850-1924)

Promenade dans la banlieue de Paris

Details
Jean-François Raffaëlli (French, 1850-1924)
Promenade dans la banlieue de Paris
signed 'JF RAFFAËLLI' (lower right)
oil on canvas
15 3/8 x 18 3/8 in. (39 x 46.6 cm.)
Provenance
Jean-Joseph Weertz (1846-1927), Paris.
Anonymous sale; Blanchet & Joron-Derem, Paris, 17 March 2000, lot 25, as Banlieue de Paris.
Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, New York, 31 October 2000, lot 25, as The Afternoon Walk.
Acquired at the above sale by the present owner.

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Lot Essay

Raffaëlli’s interest in the outskirts of Paris, the banlieue, was likely piqued as a result of his move to Asnières in the late 1870s. Once a rural town outside of Paris, Asnières benefited briefly from an upsurge in popularity as a resort destination for Parisians. Consequently, by the time the artist arrived in 1878, the town’s identity straddled ambiguously between the rural and the urban. While there, Raffaëlli committed himself to documenting the resulting suburban landscape and it is precisely this exploration which inspired countless artists and writers to examine the industrial banlieue of Paris in the 1880s. Notably, Vincent van Gogh openly praised and admired Raffaëlli’s work in Asnières. In a letter to his brother dated July 1885, van Gogh commended the artist's studies: ‘But he who paints, like Raffaëlli, the ragpickers of Paris in their own quarter has far more difficulties, and his work is more serious’ (M. Young, 'Heroic Indolence: Realism and the Politics of Time in Raffaëlli’s Absinthe Drinkers,' The Art Bulletin, June 2008, vol. 90, no. 2, p. 246).

It is interesting to note that the first owner of the present work was the artist Jean-Joseph Weerts, who clearly appreciated and admired the work. In celebrating the spaces and people at the edge of the city—‘where nothing ends, and where nothing begins’—Raffaëlli in many ways invented the suburban landscape. He succeeded in imbuing the seemingly down-trodden environment with a sense of reverie, of the ideal.

We are grateful to Galerie Brame & Lorenceau for confirming the authenticity of this work.

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