First Paul Cézanne painting in Ireland unveiled by National Gallery

Anonymous donor contributes ‘very generous’ sum for purchase of La Vie des Champs

La Vie des Champs (1876-77), by Paul Cézanne, is now on display at the National Gallery of Ireland. Photograph: Roy Hewson/National Gallery of Ireland
La Vie des Champs (1876-77), by Paul Cézanne, is now on display at the National Gallery of Ireland. Photograph: Roy Hewson/National Gallery of Ireland

The National Gallery of Ireland on Friday morning unveiled the first painting by the French post-Impressionist Paul Cézanne, a foundational figure for modern art, to go on public display on the island of Ireland.

La Vie des Champs (Life in the Fields) is a small oil on canvas, just 27.6 x 35.2cm, and was completed in 1877 in Cézanne’s native Provence, in France. The acquisition was announced and unveiled in the gallery’s Millennium Wing by Minister for Arts Catherine Martin and director of the National Gallery of Ireland (NGI) Dr Caroline Campbell.

“This painting by Paul Cézanne, made at a turning point in his career, is a work of international importance,” said Dr Campbell. Ms Martin commended the NGI for securing the painting for the national collection. “La Vie des Champs is a magnificent addition to the National Gallery and will now be on free display for all to enjoy.”

The unveiling has taken place of La Vie des Champs (“Life in the Fields”), an exquisite work by Paul Cézanne, at the National Gallery of Ireland. Photo: Nick Bradshaw/The Irish Times
The unveiling has taken place of La Vie des Champs (“Life in the Fields”), an exquisite work by Paul Cézanne, at the National Gallery of Ireland. Photo: Nick Bradshaw/The Irish Times

La Vie des Champs depicts a gathering of farmhands resting in a lush field, with a stream and hill in the background. The focus of the painting is the silhouette of a water-bearing woman with a jug on her head. Tree branches spread in the foreground, with small human figures below and a long sweep of field stretching to steep mountains in the background.

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Funding to buy the painting was a mixum-gatherum: a significant but undisclosed sum from the Department of Arts, the NGI’s own resources, and what Ms Martin called “a very generous private philanthropic donation” from someone Dr Campbell described as “a great friend and supporter of the gallery”. The donor wants to be anonymous.

In keeping with secrecy and delays surrounding the unveiling, both Ms Martin and the NGI director were unforthcoming about the price paid for the painting, citing protection of the donor’s privacy and “commercial sensitivity”.

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“Cézanne’s work has particularly appealed to other artists, and I hope that this acquisition will help to inspire creativity in Ireland, as well as philanthropy,” Dr Campbell said.

It was bought from Agnew’s, an art dealer in London, in 2022.

Arts Minister Catherine Martin TD (right) and Dr Caroline Campbell, Director of the National Gallery of Ireland, at the unveiling of the first painting acquired by NGI, by renowned French artist, Paul Cézanne.  Photo: Nick Bradshaw/The Irish Times
Arts Minister Catherine Martin TD (right) and Dr Caroline Campbell, Director of the National Gallery of Ireland, at the unveiling of the first painting acquired by NGI, by renowned French artist, Paul Cézanne. Photo: Nick Bradshaw/The Irish Times

What we do know about price is that In April 2018 it sold for $1,450,000 at Freeman’s auction house in Philadelphia, where it was estimated at $1.2-1.8 million. It had been part of the collection of Dorrance “Dodo” Hill Hamilton, an American heir of the Campbell Soup fortune, philanthropist, horticulturist and one of the wealthiest Americans, according to Forbes. Hamilton died in 2017. Originally part of the collection of Cézanne’s dealer Ambroise Vollard, the painting has moved around over the years, mainly within France and, since 1931, in the US.

The painting is a major addition to the NGI’s holdings of late 19th-century European art, and is likely to be a big draw for the public. It is hanging in the last of rooms one to five in the Millenium wing. The provenance is excellent; Cézanne’s signature is not immediately visible to the viewer.

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Cézanne had a huge impact on early 20th century art and was the first artist to explore abstraction in Western painting. While the NGI has a Cézanne drawing in its collection (La Montagne Sainte-Victoire from Les Lauves, near Aix-en-Provence, a graphite and watercolour, presented by Chester Beatty in 1954), this is the first oil painting of his to go on public display on the island of Ireland.

Both the Dr Campbell and Ms Martin thanked Seán Rainbird, former NGI director, for his role in securing the painting.

Deirdre Falvey

Deirdre Falvey

Deirdre Falvey is a features and arts writer at The Irish Times