At the Seaside (Brooks painting)

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ArtistRomaine Brooks
Year1914
MediumOil on canvas
MovementPost-Impressionism
At the Seaside
Self-portrait
ArtistRomaine Brooks
Year1914
MediumOil on canvas
MovementPost-Impressionism
LocationCentre Georges Pompidou
Websitehttps://www.centrepompidou.fr/fr/ressources/oeuvre/cMLLpq

At the Seaside (French: Au bord de la mer) is a self-portrait oil on canvas painting by Romaine Brooks.[1] It is currently housed at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris.[2]

The woman depicted is Brooks, then 40 years old, alone and standing next to an icy beach. The painting is primarily in shades of blue and gray. Her face is so pale it blends into the overcast sky; her dark cloak is wrapped around her body.[3] She looks directly at the viewer.[4]

Analysis

Brooks often used the romantic image of a figure in isolation in her work.[5] At the Seaside has been described as her most vulnerable work. The woman seems timid, emotional, and fragile.[3]

Brooks' 1923 self-portrait

Androgyny

Brooks often painted androgynous female figures. She was a lesbian, and she explored this aspect of herself through her work. In At the Seaside, she paints herself with short hair and features that are not overtly feminine nor masculine. Her figure is obscured by the long cloak.[6]

Nonetheless, Brooks is still identifiable as a girl in this self-portrait. Her 1923 self-portrait, painted nearly a decade later, is even more androgynous.[7] Here, her hair is completely covered by a large hat, and her figure is covered by a loose suit. [8]

Color scheme

Brooks is well known today for her monochromatic portraits of women.[9] Around 1910, she met Gabriele d’Annunzio, an Italian painter and writer, who influenced her to begin painting exclusively in shades of gray. Her portrait of d’Annunzio in 1912 matches in color scheme of At the Seaside.[10] About d’Annunzio, Brooks stated he “changed the world about me and lifted me out of a state of deep despondency."[11]

Reception

References

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