
The Parc des Lions at Port-Marly
Historical Context
Corot's late painting of the Parc des Lions at Port-Marly, now in the Thyssen-Bornemisza collection, shows him engaging with a specific aristocratic garden landscape near the Seine west of Paris. Port-Marly was a fashionable riverside village whose parks and wooded estates attracted landscape painters throughout the 19th century. Corot brings his characteristic late vision to this formal park setting, transforming the manicured grounds into the same silvery, poetic woodland atmosphere he created for wilder subjects. The 1872 date places the work in the final phase of his career, when his soft atmospheric style had achieved its greatest refinement.
Technical Analysis
Corot renders the park landscape with his characteristic feathery foliage treatment and silvery atmospheric palette. The formal parkland loses its artificiality under his handling, becoming a space of gentle natural poetry.






