Page 21 - G19C Maastricht Catalog
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Joaquín Sorolla y Bastida

 BEACH AT VALENCIA (PLAYA DE VALENCIA)


 Valencia, with its sunny beaches, provided constant inspiration for
 Sorolla throughout his career. He delighted in depicting the local
 fishermen, often accompanied by hefty oxen, hauling in their boats
 after a day’s catch. As Sorolla himself proclaimed, “Valencia and its
 beaches have absorbed my entire existence.” (C. Brinton, “Sorolla
 at the Hispanic Society,” The International Studio 37, no. 145
 (March 1909), pp. iii, xii).


 If Valencia provided the setting for Sorolla’s subjects, it equally
 inspired him to perfect his plein air technique, thereby crowning him
 as one of the greatest modern masters in evoking the everchanging
 light and color of his natural surroundings, especially the seashore.
 The present work, painted on El Cabañal beach in Valencia in late
 summer 1910, is representative of Sorolla’s best plein air paintings.
 Larger than most of his oil sketches, the subject is defined by a
 virtuoso handling of the paint and a vibrant palette. With very few
 brushstrokes, Sorolla has perfectly rendered the billowing sails of
 the boats and the bustling activity of the fishermen. Sorolla’s oil
 sketches were so highly valued that a large selection was always
 included in major international exhibitions of his more conventional
 easel paintings. “Every color note was a little talisman that magically
 encapsulated the essence of its painter’s talent.” (Blanca Pons-
 Sorolla and Mark A. Roglan, ed., Sorolla and America, exh. cat.,
 Madrid, 2013, p. 221).


 Exhibited in 1911 at Sorolla’s second American retrospective held
 at the Art Institute of Chicago, Playa de Valencia was purchased by
 American businessman and entrepreneur, Frederick Forrest Peabody
 of Santa Barbara, California.
















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