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©
Carmen Thyssen Collection
Theo Van Rysselberghe

The El Khemis Gate in Meknes, Morocco

1887
Oil on canvas.
40.5 x 61 cm
Carmen Thyssen Collection
Inv. no. (
CTB.2000.57
)
Not on display
  • Level 2 Permanent Collection
  • Level 1 Permanent Collection
  • Level 0 Carmen Thyssen Collection and Temporary exhibition rooms
  • Level -1 Temporary exhibition rooms, Conference room and EducaThyssen workshop
Level 2
Permanent Collection
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 14 13 15 16 17 18 22 19 20 21 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Recommended start of the visitClassical rooms
1 14th Century. Early Italian Painting 2 15th Century. German and Spanish Painting 3 15th Century. Early Netherlandish Painting 4 15th Century. Italian Painting 5 15th and 16th Centuries. Renaissance Portraiture 6 16th Century. Villahermosa Gallery 7 16th Century. Italian Painting 8 15th and 16th Centuries. German Painting 9 15th and 16th Centuries. German Painting 10 16th Century. Netherlandish Painting 11 Tiziano, Tintoretto, Bassano and  El Greco 12 17th Century. Caravaggio and Baroque Painting 13 Temporary exhibition rooms: Guardi and Venice in the Collection of the Gulbenkian Museum 14 Temporary exhibition rooms: Guardi and Venice in the Collection of the Gulbenkian Museum 15 Temporary exhibition rooms: Guardi and Venice in the Collection of the Gulbenkian Museum 16 18th Century. Italian Painting 17 18th Century. Italian Painting 18 18th Century. Italian Painting 19 Classical rooms 20 Classical rooms 21 Classical rooms 22 18th Century. Italian Painting 23 17th Century. Dutch Painting. Landscape 24 18th Century. French and English Painting 25 17th Century. Dutch Painting. Scenes of Daily Life and Interiors 26 17th Century. Dutch Painting. Landscape 27 17th Century. Dutch Painting. Portrait 28 17th Century. Dutch Painting. Landscape 29 19th Century. European Painting. Goya and Romanticism  
Level 1
Permanent Collection
30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 Postpop rooms Rodin room
30 18th and 19th Centuries. Transatlantic Relations 31 19th Century. American Landscape and Environmental Awareness 32 19th Century. American Landscape and Urban Life 33 Recovering the ligth. Restoration of Waterloo Bridge, by André Derain 34 20th Century. Expressionist Landscapes 35 20th Century. Expressionist Portraits 36 20th Century. The Language of the Body 37 20th Century. Urban unrest 38 20th Century. Flowers 39 20th Century. Pioneers of abstraction 40 20th Century. Popular flavor 41 20th Century. The Cubist Tradition I 42 20th Century. The Cubist Tradition II 43 20th Century. Abstract Utopias 44 20th Century. Dada and Surrealism 45 20th Century. Interwar Realisms 46 20th Century. American Abstraction I 48 20th Century. Post-ward American Art 49 20th Century. Post-ward European Figurative Art 50 20th Century. Informalisms 51 20th Century. Homo Ludens 52 20th Century. Pop Art 53 Temporary exhibition rooms 54 Temporary exhibition rooms 55 Temporary exhibition rooms 56 Temporary exhibition rooms Rodin Exhibition room
Level 0
Carmen Thyssen Collection and Temporary exhibition rooms
A B C D E F G H I J Hall Temporary exhibition rooms Access to Permanent Collection Entrance Access to Carmen Thyssen Collection Paseo del Prado Garden
A 17th and 18th Centuries. Old Masters B 19th Century. North American Landscape C 19th Century. French Naturalist Landscape D 19th Century. Impressionism E 19th Century. Monet and North American Impressionism F 19th Century. Gauguin and Postimpressionism G 19th and 20th Centuries. Neo Impressionism and its Wake H 20th Century. Early Avant-gardes I 20th Century. Between the Wars Painting. Cubism, Abstraction and Surrealism J 20th Century. North American Painting and Others • HALL
Level -1
Temporary exhibition rooms, Conference room and EducaThyssen workshop
Temporary exhibition rooms Conference room EducaThyssen Workshop

Théo Van Rysselberghe was a keen traveller, and it was during his third sojourn in Morocco, from 4 December 1887 to 5 March 1888, that he painted this view of Meknès. He was accompanying the Belgian jurist and writer Edmond Picard on his official mission to the Sultan Moulay Hassan. His task was to make sketches that would later illustrate Picard's work entitled El Moghreb Al Aksa. Une mission belge au Maroc. The book, now rare and much sought-after, was published in 1889 in Brussels by Larcier, with a frontispiece by Odilon Redon and 27 full-page lithographs in black and white or red by Van Rysselberghe. The artist reveals in them all the magnificence and mystery of that far-away land. Van Rysselberghe, who had begun his career as a realist painter and had later moved to an autochthonous Impressionist style, had just come across Seurat and French neo-Impressionism, thanks to his friend the Belgian poet Emile Verhaeren. They had seen together La Grande-Jatte in Paris in 1886 and visited the Salon des XX in Brussels in February 1887. When he left for Morocco, Van Rysselberghe was still in a state of shock from that discovery.

Initially disconcerted by this new technique which, according to the scientific principles put forth by Chevreul and Rood, juxtaposes touches of pure colours which the eye then synthesises, Van Rysselberghe quickly adopted this revolutionary artistic process, adapting it to his own personality and pictorial requirements. He remained faithful to a realistic vision of things and maintained his intrinsic originality, while at the same time borrowing from Seurat his technical procedure, although he never adopted its hieratic stylisation. He fragmented his brushstroke and varied its size, obtaining a greater sense of light, compared with his former practice, when he mixed the coloured pigments on the palette. Thanks to the many letters he wrote from Morocco, in particular to his friend Verhaeren, we know to what extent the artist was impressed by that country, by its light, its colours and its extremely particular atmosphere. They are all aspects which are reflected in this painting, and which made the artist write: "I would like people to feel it is hot [...]" and also "[...] the weather is wonderful, so beautiful, so mild, that nothing could give you an idea of it. That is the point when I do not dare paint. My colours seem so dirty, heavy, dull. How can I convey the fluidity, the transparency, the pure taste of the air? How can I convey the colours made up of so many different shades, all so pure, so bright [...] And I must say I do try [...] I make notes of colours, and I will develop in Brussels some of the motifs I have sketched, and which would in any case be impossible to paint here in a somewhat definitive manner: the effects disappear quickly, the subject is too beautiful, it stifles the effort put into rendering it [...] I look, I observe, I write [...] I collect notes, I accumulate a thousand things which I fix in my mind and which I will reconstitute later, according to my sketches. This sojourn will remain for me one of the most beautiful memories of my life."

Was this view of Meknès painted from nature or in the studio after his return? We know that the artist took with him on his trip six blank canvases, two or three of which were already "daubed" when he arrived in Meknès. But the place of creation has little importance, only the result matters. In the six works painted in or inspired by Morocco which he exhibited at the Salon des XX in Brussels in 1889, Van Rysselberghe showed his great originality. His light and lively brushstroke is entirely different from the systematic pointillism of Seurat. It is able to convey the special atmosphere, the beauty of the colours, the light playing on the surfaces of the buildings, the rustle of the wind and the clouds crossing the sky.

Giséle Ollinger-Zinque
 

19th CenturyPaintingOilcanvas
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Carmen Thyssen Collection

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The Mansur Gate in Meknes, Morocco. La puerta de Al-Monsour, Mequinez, Marruecos, 1887
The El Khemis Gate in Meknes, Morocco
Theo Van Rysselberghe

©

Carmen Thyssen Collection

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