, On the Beach, Trouville, 1887, oil on wood. National Gallery of Art, Washington.jpg&width=1200)
On the Beach, Trouville
Eugène Louis Boudin·1887
Historical Context
On the Beach, Trouville (1887) by Eugène Louis Boudin, now in the collection of National Gallery of Art, is a marine subject reflecting the 19th-century tradition of coastal painting as both documentary record and atmospheric study of light on water. Eugène Boudin was a pivotal transitional figure between Barbizon landscape painting and Impressionism, one of the first French artists to work consistently in the open air on the Normandy coast. He is credited with introducing the young Claude Monet to outdoor painting — an encounter Monet always acknowledged as transformative.
Technical Analysis
Boudin painted with light, swift strokes applied directly on site, building luminous skies of extraordinary freshness from rapidly mixed whites, grays, and pale blues. His beach scenes dissolve figures into atmospheric specks against vast luminous expanses.






