French impressionist painter, whose friendship and support provided
encouragement for many younger painters. Pissarro was born in Saint
Thomas, Virgin Islands, and moved to Paris in 1855, where he studied with
the French landscape painter Camille Corot. At first associated with the
Barbizon school, Pissarro subsequently joined the impressionists and was
represented in all their exhibitions. During the Franco-Prussian War
(1870-1871), he lived in England and made a study of English art,
particularly the landscapes of Joseph Mallord William Turner. For a time
in the 1880s Pissarro, discouraged with his work, experimented with
pointillism; the new style, however, proved unpopular with collectors and
dealers, and he returned to what he found to be a freer impressionist
style.
A painter of sunshine and the scintillating play of light, Pissarro
produced many quiet rural landscapes and river scenes. He also painted
street scenes in Paris, Le Havre, and London. An excellent teacher, he
counted among his pupils and associates the French painters Paul Gauguin
and Paul Cézanne, his son Lucien Pissarro, and the American impressionist
Mary Cassatt. Of Pissarro's great output (including paintings,
watercolors, and graphics), many works hang in the Musée d'Orsay, Paris,
and in the leading galleries of Europe. The Metropolitan Museum of Art,
New York City, has his Bather in the Woods (1895).