Construction of an Elevated Railway:  Bridge over the Cours de Vincennes

Description

Conceived in 1851, after Napoleon III came to power, the railway encircling Paris was intended to transport merchandise and, eventually, passengers. The railway represented a new convenience, but measures were needed to ensure the safety of other traffic. The numerous railway crossings included in the initial plans turned out to be a source of fatal accidents. To remedy the problem, the platforms and retaining walls were to be raised at the most dangerous spots. The Cours de Vincennes, in the eastern part of Paris, had been one of the deadliest intersections. The work on an elevated railway bridge over this street, which is depicted here, was completed in February 1889. Trouillebert concentrated on portraits until about 1881, when he began to focus on landscapes. He also painted everyday scenes and nudes. He was commissioned by Edme Piot, a public works contractor, to paint this and four related views of the Paris railway construction.

Provenance

Edme Piot [1828-1909], Paris, by descent to his family (1888-1909); Descendents of Edme Piot (1909-); (Galerie J. F. Heim, Paris, sold to Noah and Muriel Butkin (Until 1977); Noah and Muriel Butkin, Cleveland, OH, bequeathed to the Cleveland Museum of Art as a result of disclaimer by Muriel S. Butkin (Until 1980); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio (1980-)

Construction of an Elevated Railway: Bridge over the Cours de Vincennes

Paul Désiré Trouillebert

1888

Accession Number

1980.289

Medium

oil on fabric

Dimensions

Unframed: 38.2 x 56 cm (15 1/16 x 22 1/16 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Bequest of Noah L. Butkin

Tags

Painting Impressionist & Modern (1851–1900) Oil Painting French

Background & Context

Background Story

Paul Desire Trouillebert (1829-1900) was a French painter known for the atmospheric, precisely observed landscape paintings that make him one of the accomplished painters of the Barbizon tradition. Construction of an Elevated Railway: Bridge over the Cours de Vincennes from 1888 depicts the construction of an elevated railway bridge in the atmospheric, precisely observed manner that distinguishes Trouillebert's best work from the more general landscape painting of his contemporaries. The 1888 date places this in the period when Paris was undergoing the transformation of Haussmann's renovations and the expansion of the railway system, and the painting shows Trouillebert's talent for combining atmospheric landscape with the precise observation of modern industrial subjects.

Cultural Impact

Construction of an Elevated Railway is important in the history of French painting because it demonstrates the atmospheric, precisely observed manner that Trouillebert brought to the depiction of modern industrial subjects. The painting of the construction of an elevated railway bridge—one of the most modern subjects in 19th-century French painting—shows how the atmospheric landscape tradition of the Barbizon school could be applied to the most modern subjects, and the 1888 painting represents one of the accomplished traditions in the depiction of modern Paris.

Why It Matters

Construction of an Elevated Railway is Trouillebert's atmospheric depiction of modern Paris: an elevated railway bridge under construction rendered in the precisely observed manner of one of the accomplished painters of the Barbizon tradition. The 1888 painting shows the combination of atmospheric landscape with the precise observation of modern industrial subjects.