
Foggy morning, Rouen
Camille Pissarro·1896
Historical Context
Painted in 1896, this canvas in Glasgow records Rouen in fog — part of a major urban campaign in which Pissarro rented rooms overlooking the Seine-side city to document its bridges, waterways, and quays across changing weather. Rouen's industrial and commercial activity along the river, combined with its medieval cathedral and Gothic churches, gave Pissarro a layered subject that carried both contemporary and historical resonance. Foggy conditions were particularly prized for the way they dissolved solid forms into atmospheric suggestion, a Turneresque quality that French Impressionists increasingly explored. This work was painted the same year Pissarro also worked on the Rouen cathedral subject, paralleling Monet's famous series.
Technical Analysis
Fog is conveyed through a close-valued palette of grey, pale ochre, and muted blue-green, with architectural forms barely distinguishable from atmosphere. Pissarro builds depth through tonal graduation rather than line, with the Seine carrying the palest, most luminous passages. Brushwork is fluid and suggestive rather than descriptive.
Look Closer
- ◆The fog makes Rouen's cathedral towers visible as grey forms behind a gauze of atmospheric moisture.
- ◆The Seine is barely distinguishable from the fog — water and atmosphere sharing the same tonal.
- ◆Pissarro's divisionist technique builds the fog from thousands of small color marks rather than.
- ◆A break in the fog reveals a slightly warmer area where the sun attempts to penetrate the grey.






