Artwork Page for The Cliffs at Beg-ar-Fry, Saint-Jean-du-Doigt

Details / Information for The Cliffs at Beg-ar-Fry, Saint-Jean-du-Doigt

The Cliffs at Beg-ar-Fry, Saint-Jean-du-Doigt

1895
(French, 1861–1918)
Measurements
Framed: 66.5 x 80 x 4.5 cm (26 3/16 x 31 1/2 x 1 3/4 in.); Unframed: 60 x 73.3 cm (23 5/8 x 28 7/8 in.)
Public Domain
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Description

Maxime Maufra was initially an amateur artist, but in 1883 he gave up a career in business to devote himself entirely to painting. He traveled throughout Normandy and Britany painting sea- and landscapes. During a visit to Pont-Aven in northwestern France in 1890 he met Paul Gauguin and a group of young artists who were inspired by Gauguin’s approaches to color and composition in his art. In particular, Maufra began to translate forms into flat planes of bold color arranged in decorative patterns as seen in this seascape of the Breton coast. Perhaps the most striking aspect of this painting is the way the artist framed the composition at the left with the view of a steep cliff.
A horizontally oriented oil painting uses thick, textured brushstrokes to depict a rugged coastline. Bright green cliffs slope toward a churning sea of turquoise and deep blue, where white foam crashes in heavy swaths against dark rocks. A vertical gray rock face frames the left edge, while a large dark stone with a red signature anchors the foreground. Above, wispy clouds drift across a light blue sky, mirroring the water's restless movement.

The Cliffs at Beg-ar-Fry, Saint-Jean-du-Doigt

1895

Maxime Maufra

(French, 1861–1918)
France, 19th century

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