Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

Plan your visit. 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, New York, NY 10016.

Charles François Daubigny Sketchbook

037. Folios 35 verso–36 recto
038. Folios 36 verso–37 recto
039. Folios 37 verso–38 recto
040. Folios 38 verso–39 recto
041. Folios 39 verso–40 recto
042. Folios 40 verso–41 recto
043. Folios 41 verso–42 recto
044. Folios 42 verso–43 recto
045. Folios 43 verso–44 recto
046. Folios 44 verso–45 recto
047. Folios 45 verso–46 recto
048. Folios 46 verso–47 recto

As a leading artist of the Barbizon school, Daubigny was committed to naturalism and often worked outdoors, either on land or from a boat he converted into a floating studio. This proclivity was appreciated by a circle of younger artists who would come to be known as the Impressionists. In addition to working as a landscape painter, in the 1830s and -40s Daubigny created illustrations for books, magazines, and travel guides. Advancements in both the national railway system and affordable book printing created a demand for guidebooks to accompany travelers as they discovered this still-new mode of exploration. Daubigny's sketchbook documents sites on rail journeys made between Paris, Rouen, and Le Havre in ca. 1847. Some of the sketches depicting the architecture and lively human bustle of the train stations, and the waterways, cities, and landscapes the artist passed through, served as the basis for engraved plates that chronicled the world awaiting the intrepid rail traveler.

Follow Daubigny on his voyages by paging through the sketchbook.

The sketchbook will be on view June 16 through October 22, 2023 in the exhibition Into the Woods: French Drawings and Photographs from the Karen B. Cohen Gift.