The Luxembourg Station in Brussels
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/57/Henri_Ottmann%2C_%27The_Luxembourg_Station_in_Brussels%27%2C_1903.jpg/300px-Henri_Ottmann%2C_%27The_Luxembourg_Station_in_Brussels%27%2C_1903.jpg)
The Luxembourg Station in Brussels is a 1903 painting by Henri Ottmann. It's displayed at the Musée d'Orsay in Paris.[1]
In the Salon of Free Aesthetics, Brussels, 1903, Henri Ottmann for the first time exhibited three views of the city's Luxembourg Station, picturing one weather condition for each view: wind, frost and fog. It is probable that the painting was one of these three.
The point of view is from a bridge which shadows the crossing train tracks. The signal stands just behind the frame, the painting shows its top. This motif is similar to Claude Monet's Track signals outside Saint-Lazare station, 1877 (Hanover, Lower Saxony State Museum). Ottmann was inspired by French Impressionists, particularly Pierre-Auguste Renoir.
Picturing modern subjects in an ornamental way was one of the points of interest of Ottmann.
References
- ^ Henri Ottmann; Vue de la gare du Luxembourg à Bruxelles; Musée d'Orsay
External links
- The Luxembourg Station in Brussels at musee-orsay.fr
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- [1] On display at the Musée des Augustins in Toulouse
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