PAUL SIGNAC

The Barge, Samois

Stephen Ongpin Fine Art

Medium Pencil and watercolour, on a page from a sketchbook

Dimension 14 x 22 cm (5¹/₂ x 8⁵/₈ inches)

Executed in 1900, the present sheet was drawn at Samois-sur-Seine, a small village on the river Seine near Fontainebleau, some fifty kilometres southeast of Paris. Paul Signac is known to have visited Samois for several weeks in the fall of 1900, and may also have been there the previous year. This watercolour can be associated with a small number of Neo-Impressionist paintings by Signac depicting the river at Samois-sur-Seine, all painted in 1901, in which similar bargemen appear. These include Samois, The Riverbank, Morning, which was sold at auction in 2013 and is today in the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, The Tugboat, Samois in the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, and The Lock at Samois, in the Ny Carslberg Glypotek in Copenhagen. Also part of this group is a painting of The Barge, Samois, which is in a private collection in Paris. 

A similar Samois subject, with a barge steered by a small bluish figure at the tiller, is also found in a small watercolour by Signac in the Robert Lehman Collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. In all, Signac produced some two hundred watercolours of Samois - some of which were exhibited at Siegfried Bing’s gallery L’Art Nouveau in June 1902 - along with thirteen oil sketches and six paintings, during his time there.

Medium: Pencil and watercolour, on a page from a sketchbook

Signature: Signed, dated and inscribed P. Signac / Samois - 00 in pencil at the lower right.

Dimension: 14 x 22 cm (5¹/₂ x 8⁵/₈ inches)

Provenance: Anonymous sale, Paris, Hôtel Drouot, 22 June 1999, lot 72
Anonymous sale, London, Sotheby’s, 20 October 1998, lot 8 (bt. Wolseley)
Wolseley Fine Arts, London
Private collection, London
Cyrille de Gunzburg, Paris, in 2001
Private collection, Paris
Private collection, England.

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Stephen Ongpin Fine Art

Old Master, 19th Century and Modern Drawings, Watercolours and Oil Sketches

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