Advanced Search
Advanced Search

Waterworks at Marly

Alfred Sisley (British (active in France), 1839–1899)
about 1876

Medium/Technique Oil on canvas
Dimensions 46.5 x 61.8 cm (18 5/16 x 24 5/16 in.)
Credit Line Gift of Miss Olive Simes
Accession Number45.662
CollectionsEurope
ClassificationsPaintings
Describing Sisley’s river views, one critic noted “the breeze, like a moving mirror, splinters into a thousand pieces the gold autumn leaves and scatters the opal reflections of light, fleecy clouds, their soft gray drenched with melancholy.” Here, solitary figures sparsely populate a view of a pumping station in the western suburbs of Paris. Although a landscape painter at heart, Sisley was equally intrigued by the presence of man-made structures in nature, such as bridges, shipyards, or the waterworks facility seen here. Constructed in 1850, the modern brick building at left houses the pump, while bright autumnal foliage fills the background.

InscriptionsLower left: Sisley
ProvenanceDurand-Ruel, Paris and New York [see note 1]. By about 1915, William Simes (b. about 1844 - d. 1927), Boston [see note 2]; by descent to his daughter, Olive Simes (b. 1882 - d. 1971), Boston; 1945, gift of Miss Olive Simes to the MFA. (Accession Date: September 6, 1945)

NOTES:
[1] See François Daulte, "Alfred Sisley: catalogue raisonné de l'oeuvre peint" (Lausanne, 1959), cat. no. 216.
[2] In a letter from Olive Simes to the MFA (September 12, 1945; in MFA curatorial file), she writes of the painting that "my father, William Simes, bought it at least thirty years ago, but I do not remember where."