The Port of Pully - 1891


Size (cm): 75x50
Price:
Sale price£198 GBP

Description

The port of Pully (1891) by Félix Vallotton is a painting that is revealed as a masterpiece of detailed observation and meditative contemplation. Vallotton, a painter born in Switzerland and based in Paris, is known for his affiliation to the Nabis group and his innovation in engraving techniques, characteristics that mark his style and give him a distinctive seal. This particular work, created in a period of transition and exploration for the artist, captures the serenity of a small port in Pully, a commune located on the shores of Lake Geneva.

The composition of the paint is a sample of Vallotton's technical domain on the spatial disposition and color management. The port is represented with misleading simplicity, with a mountain background that blur on the horizon and constructions that seem organically to emerge from the ground that hosts them. The reflections in the water are achieved with a meticulousness that could almost be confused with the look of a photographer instead of the hand of a painter.

Vallotton uses an almost monochromatic palette, predominantly the cold and gray tones, subtly mixed with terrious nuances. This chromatic restriction not only provides an atmosphere of tranquility and melancholy to the scene, but also reflects the influence of the climate and light of the Lacustrea Switzer region. Unlike their impressionist contemporaries, which frequently sought to capture fleeting moments of light and color, Vallotton seems more interested in timeless calm and stage stability.

In "The Port of Pully", there are no human characters; However, the absence of figures does not subtract humanity from the work. The viewer's gaze becomes the absent presence, completing the scene with his own interpretation and presence. This invitation to complete the world painted with our imagination is a capacity that Vallotton manages with cunning, making his work an experience as introspective as visual.

It is interesting to consider that Félix Vallotton, in much of his work, explores the relationship between man and his physical and social environments. While "The Port of Pully" may seem, at first glance, simply a landscape stamp, acquires depths added when located in the context of the 19th century Switzerland, a period marked by industrial and social transformations. The purity and tranquility that radiates from the scene can be read as a reflection of a period prior to such transformations or, alternatively, as a longing for stability in times of change.

Although Vallotton is more recognized for his engravings and his intimate portraits, works such as "El Puerto de Pully" highlight their versatility and ability to make landscapes talk about the emotions and interior states of the human being. Vallotton invites, through this piece, to a quiet contemplation and a reconnection with nature and its leisurely rhythms, at a time that was already beginning to hurry.

This painting is inserted in a tradition between the end of the 19th and early twentieth centuries, where the exploration of natural landscapes becomes a form of resistance to the growing industrialization and urbanization. In this simple but deep view of a port, Félix Vallotton allows us to stop, observe, and find a moment of serenity in the daily life of the Swiss landscape.

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