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Paris Street. Raining (study)
Gustave Caillebotte·1877
Historical Context
Caillebotte painted Haussmann's rebuilt Paris with a precision and spatial boldness that reflects his engineering training. This 1877 canvas uses dramatic perspectival recession — the kind of viewpoint photography and Japanese prints had taught painters to recognize — to render the boulevards of modern Paris as both impressive and alienating. His figures move through urban space without acknowledgment of each other, embodying the anonymity of modern metropolitan life His financial support of the Impressionist movement — through purchasing and organizing exhibitions — complemented his own formally adventurous painting practice.
Technical Analysis
Caillebotte combined Impressionist color sensibility with a precise, almost photographic realism derived from academic training. His compositions use bold perspectival recession — often from elevated viewpoints — with smooth, carefully blended brushwork.






