The River Seine at Mantes
        
      
              
                                
 Charles-François Daubigny
                  
      
              
                    
European Art
        
      
      
              
          Charles-François Daubigny explores the coexistence of work and leisure in this view of Mantes, located on the Seine near Paris. A middleclass woman with a fishing rod approaches the river, while the boat steaming toward the bridge indicates the river’s function as a working waterway. Another figure in the background wears the blue jacket traditionally worn by rural French laborers. Juxtaposing the Gothic towers and pitched roof of the town’s church with an active smokestack, Daubigny also acknowledges France’s historical past and its industrial present.        
              
      
              
      
              
          MEDIUM
          Oil on canvas        
      
              
      
              
          DATES
          ca. 1856        
      
      
      
              
          DIMENSIONS
          19 1/16 x 29 3/4 in. (48.4 x 75.6 cm)
Frame: 33 1/8 x 43 3/4 x 5 1/2 in.          	
 (show scale)
	
         
      
      
              
          SIGNATURE
          Signed lower left: "Daubigny"        
      
      
              
      
      
        ACCESSION NUMBER
        33.271      
              
          CREDIT LINE
          Gift of Cornelia E. and Jennie A. Donnellon        
      
      
      
              
      
      
        MUSEUM LOCATION
                  This item is not on view
              
              
          CAPTION
          Charles-François Daubigny (Paris, France, 1817–1878, Paris, France). The River Seine at Mantes, ca. 1856. Oil on canvas, 19 1/16 x 29 3/4 in. (48.4 x 75.6 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Cornelia E. and Jennie A. Donnellon, 33.271 (Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 33.271_SL1.jpg)        
      
      
      
              
          IMAGE
          overall, 33.271_SL1.jpg. Brooklyn Museum photograph, 2009          
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