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1898, Edgar Degas, View of Saint-Valery-sur-Somme -- Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York)

From the museum label: Degas's Provençal painting of Saint-Valéry-sur-Somme, a medieval town on the Picardy coast northwest of Paris, surveys the site from an elevated vantage point, lending a view of rooftops and facades as well as backyards and gardens. This landscape was not painted on site but later in the artist's studio, where he experimented with the structure of his many studies of Saint-Valéry-sur-Somme. The particularly ambiguous foreground and fractured elements in the background may result from the synthesis of two separate drawings sketched on site, the left half aligning with one sketch and the right, another. Degas once advised: "A painting is something that requires as much trickery, malice, and vice as the perpetration of a crime, so create falsely and add a touch from nature."

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Uploaded on September 2, 2019
Taken on May 18, 2019