Camille Pissarro

Le Havre – The Artists – Pissarro, Camille

This page forms part of a series of pages dedicated to the many artists who worked in Le Havre. A full list of all the artists with a link to their works can be found at the bottom of this page.

Camille Pissarro
Camille Pissarro

Movement(s): Impressionism, Neo Impressionism, Post Impressionism

Camille Pissarro (1830 – 1903) was a Danish-French Impressionist and Neo-Impressionist painter. He was born on the island of St. Thomas (when it was still in hands of Denmark). He is recognised as being important and an influencer in the impressionist movement.

In 1859 his first painting was accepted and exhibited. His other paintings during that period were influenced by Camille Corot, who tutored him. He and Corot both shared a love of rural scenes painted from nature. It was by Corot that Pissarro was inspired to paint outdoors, also called “plein air” painting. Pissarro found Corot, along with the work of Gustave Courbet, to be “statements of pictorial truth,” writes Rewald. He discussed their work often. Jean-François Millet was another whose work he admired, especially his “sentimental renditions of rural life“.

As the recognised “Dean of Impressionists“, he became friends with the likes of Claude Monet, Paul Cezanne and several other who have become famous later on.

In 1903 Pissarro was seeing hard times and needed money. A businessman in Le Havre commissioned him to make 24 paintings of the harbour of Le Havre. Most of them were made out of his hotel room.

Pissarro had quite an active life as a painter, and was controversial. Click here to read Pissarro’s full bio on Wikipedia.

NOTE: Click on any image below for a bigger version (no new window will open).

NOTE: A black box like this one, means that there is an explanation text about today’s situation of the painting above it.
NOTE: Click on this photo icon anywhere below a painting to see a photo of what the area looks like today.

NOTE: A blue box like this one, means there is an explanation or a note.

1903 - Camille Pissarro - Entrance to the Port of Le Havre and West Breakwater, Sun, Rough Sea
1903 – Camille Pissarro – Entrance to the Port of Le Havre and West Breakwater, Sun, Rough Sea
Camille Pissarro 1903 - Entrance To The Port And The West Breakwaters
1903 – Camille Pissarro – Entrance To The Port And The West Breakwaters

NOTE: The entrance to the harbour remains the same, except the entry is wider.

Camille Pissarro 1903 - Outer Harbour, Morning, Sun Tide
1903 – Camille Pissarro – Outer Harbour, Morning, Sun Tide
Camille Pissarro 1903 - Pilot Jetty, High Tide Afternoon Sun
1903 – Camille Pissarro – Pilot Jetty, High Tide Afternoon Sun
Camille Pissarro 1903 - Pilot's Jetty, Morning Cloudy and Misty Weather
1903 – Camille Pissarro – Pilot’s Jetty, Morning Cloudy and Misty Weather
Camille Pissarro 1903 - Port
1903 – Camille Pissarro – Port
Camille Pissarro 1903 - Port
1903 – Camille Pissarro – Port
1903 - Camille Pissarro - Quayside at Le Havre
1903 – Camille Pissarro – Quayside at Le Havre
Camille Pissarro 1903 - Regates in the Port Fort of Florida
1903 – Camille Pissarro – Regates in the Port Fort of Florida

NOTE: The Fort of Florida is now “Pointe Floride” and is used for cruise ships (a maximum of 4 can come here at the same time).

1903 - Camille Pissarro - Regatta at the Port of Havre
1903 – Camille Pissarro – Regatta at the Port of Havre
Camille Pissarro 1903 - Ship Entering the Harbor
1903 – Camille Pissarro – Ship Entering the Harbor
Camille Pissarro 1903 - The Inner Harbor
1903 – Camille Pissarro – The Inner Harbor
Camille Pissarro 1903 - The Inner Port and Pilot Jetty
1903 – Camille Pissarro – The Inner Port and Pilot Jetty
Camille Pissarro 1903 - The Jetty, Departure of the Transatlantique La Lorraine
1903 – Camille Pissarro – The Jetty, Departure of the Transatlantique La Lorraine

NOTE: Today cruise ships still leave Le Havre to cross the Atlantic ocean for North America.

Camille Pissarro 1903 - The Jetty, High Tide Morning Sun
1903 – Camille Pissarro – The Jetty, High Tide Morning Sun

Harfleur

Harfleur (population: 8300) is a small city located close to Le Havre on the East. It’s a suburb of Le Havre.

1903 - Camille Pissarro - Road Down Hill, Harfleur
1903 – Camille Pissarro – Road Down Hill, Harfleur

Pissarro painted mostly in Normandy and a few other places in France (plus some places abroad), which will be featured eventually on this site. A link “” to those cities will appear below.

Here are the painters/artists who painted in Le Havre (a “*” indicates that the artist did not worked directly in Le Havre itself, instead worked closeby, a link “” to the artist’s works will appear below when published):

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Today - The wider port entrance allows for enormous container ships
Today – The wider port entrance allows for enormous container ships
Today - The "Pointe Floride" is used as Cruise Ships Terminal
Today – The “Pointe Floride” is used as Cruise Ships Terminal
Today - Many Cruise Ships still leave Le Havre
Today – Many Cruise Ships still leave Le Havre
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