4th September 1883

Renoir arrived on Guernsey to paint

Pierre-Auguste Renoir, the renowned French painter, spent just over a month on Guernsey. During this time he painted, or at least started, fifteen pictures of Moulin Huet.

Moulin Huet by Pierre-Auguste Renoir

There is evidence to suggest that some of the paintings were finished after he had returned to France. Renoir wrote of bringing back “documents for making pictures in Paris”, which are likely to have been either sketches or incomplete oil works.

Renoir’s visit

Although nobody knows precisely when he arrived, he wrote a letter from his lodging at 4 George Road, St Peter Port on 5 September 1883. In it, he described how he “watched Normandy disappearing” and stopped off in Jersey on the way to Guernsey.

He described Guernsey as having “superb rocks, beaches such as Robinson must have had on his island, as well as rump steak and ale at manageable prices”. It would appear he’d had a little time to explore before writing the letter. It’s therefore conceivable that he had arrived just one or two days earlier.

It’s perhaps not surprising that Renoir chose to visit Moulin Huet. The bay was already a popular location for artists of all kinds due to its particular light and the way it played on the rocks.

Renoir’s work

Renoir’s paintings of Guernsey took several years to sell but they have since been recognised as valuable masterpieces. One of them now hangs in the National Gallery in London.

In 1988 Guernsey Museum at Candie mounted an exhibition of Renoir’s paintings of the island. The museum itself considers it to be “probably the most successful exhibition ever mounted” there. The exhibition brought together six of the artist’s paintings, and was sponsored by the island’s tourism authorities.

 

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Other events that occured in September


  • Spotlight was broadcast for the first time
  • The launch of Spotlight, the BBC’s local news bulletin covering Guernsey, the wider Channel Islands and the south-west of England, was more of a name change than anything else. The BBC’s first bulletin for the region was News from the South West. This had launched in 1961 and, within a year, had been re-titled South […]
  • Read more…