Specialists in Maritime Art & Artifacts

The Beach at Trouville

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Oil on Board
5 x 13 Inches
Inscribed LR: Trouville

Painted 1869
11¾ x 20 Inches Framed

Sensations of walking barefoot through cold, wet sand on a hot summer day are not to be taken for granted. After fighting in the American Civil War just years prior, Conrad Wise Chapman held this thought or a like one for many years. He celebrated his worldwide journeys with small panoramic paintings which feature people at leisure in their natural surroundings. The gray skies of the coast of France are famous over the globe, and for a handful of years after 1867, Chapman reveled in their cool presence.

The period dress of the well-to-do middle class is observed in the women sitting on wooden, four-legged chairs at the beach, watching the couple who are holding hands in the surf and the smallish manned sailing skiffs about their business. Flagged anchorage poles line the edge of the shelf, so inbound boats make find their marks. Some others frolic is the ocean as well. In the great distance, a large sailing ship and a steamer make for the headland ports across from the Normandy's C Incheste Fleurie (Floral Coast). Chapman's beach scenes of Trouville and nearby Deauville achieved his widest recognition for their fine aesthetic quality within his lifetime career. They are similar to the most important paintings of Eugene Boudin of people at the beach in this very same period.

SKU: 0001420

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