The Banks of the Seine at Champrosay (Detail of the Water and Grass), 1876 – Pierre-Auguste Renoir Wall Art | Impressionist Canvas Print
The Banks of the Seine at Champrosay (Detail of the Water and Grass), 1876 – Pierre-Auguste Renoir Wall Art | Impressionist Canvas Print
The Banks of the Seine at Champrosay (Detail of the Water and Grass), 1876 – Pierre-Auguste Renoir Wall Art | Impressionist Canvas Print
The Banks of the Seine at Champrosay (Detail of the Water and Grass), 1876 – Pierre-Auguste Renoir Wall Art | Impressionist Canvas Print
The Banks of the Seine at Champrosay (Detail of the Water and Grass), 1876 – Pierre-Auguste Renoir Wall Art | Impressionist Canvas Print
The Banks of the Seine at Champrosay (Detail of the Water and Grass), 1876 – Pierre-Auguste Renoir Wall Art | Impressionist Canvas Print
The Banks of the Seine at Champrosay (Detail of the Water and Grass), 1876 – Pierre-Auguste Renoir Wall Art | Impressionist Canvas Print
The Banks of the Seine at Champrosay (Detail of the Water and Grass), 1876 – Pierre-Auguste Renoir Wall Art | Impressionist Canvas Print
The Banks of the Seine at Champrosay (Detail of the Water and Grass), 1876 – Pierre-Auguste Renoir Wall Art | Impressionist Canvas Print
The Banks of the Seine at Champrosay (Detail of the Water and Grass), 1876 – Pierre-Auguste Renoir Wall Art | Impressionist Canvas Print

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The Banks of the Seine at Champrosay (Detail of the Water and Grass), 1876 – Pierre-Auguste Renoir Wall Art | Impressionist Canvas Print

Sale price$39.99 USD Regular price$99.98 USD
Save 60%
Horizontal Size:12x9"
Frame Style:Standard 0.75"

Painted in 1876 during Renoir's high Impressionist years, The Banks of the Seine at Champrosay (Detail of the Water and Grass) draws the eye close to the riverbank, where ripples in the Seine meet tall, sun-shot grasses pressed against the picture plane. The composition unfolds in cool blues, vivid greens, and warm cream tones, animated by the rapid, broken brushwork that defined Renoir's plein-air manner. The intimate, framed view forms a counterpart to his fuller panoramic view of Champrosay painted the same season, when Renoir worked near the Forest of Sénart while staying with the novelist Alphonse Daudet. The work stands as a luminous testament to Impressionism's close-up attentiveness to nature.