Sunset

Eugène Delacroix French

Not on view

In fall 1850, the French Romantic artist Delacroix observed the vivid color effects of the sky from his country house at Champrosay, near Fontainebleau:"It was sunset; the chrome and lake tones were most brilliant on the side where it was light and the shadows were extraordinarily blue and cold. . . . I noticed the same phenomenon at sunset, yesterday evening; it is more brilliant and striking than at midday, only because the contrasts are sharper. The gray of the clouds in the evening verges on blue; the clear parts of the sky are bright yellow or orange. The general rule is, the greater the contrast, the more brilliant the effect." Fascinated by the ephemeral play of light and shadow, Delacroix captured those effects in this quiet, expressive rendering of a sunset.

Sunset, Eugène Delacroix (French, Charenton-Saint-Maurice 1798–1863 Paris), Pastel on blue laid paper

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