Theo van Rysselberghe Painting Reproductions 2 of 3
1862-1926
Belgian Post-Impressionist Painter
Theo (Theophile) van Rysselberghe (November 23, 1862 - December 14, 1926), was a Belgian post-impressionist painter, who played a pivotal role in the European art scene at the turn of the century.
Early years
Born in Ghent to a French-speaking bourgeois family, he studied first at the Academy of Ghent under Theo Canneel and from 1879 at the Academy of Brussels under the directorship of Jean-Francois Portaels. The North African paintings of Portaels had started an orientalist fashion in Belgium. Their impact would strongly influence the young Theo van Rysselberghe. Between 1882 and 1888 he made three trips to Morocco, staying there a total of one year and half.
Barely 18 years old, he already participated at the Salon of Ghent, showing two portraits. Soon afterwards followed his Self-portrait with pipe (1880), painted in somber colours in the Belgian realistic tradition of that time. His Child in an open spot of the forest (1880) already departs from this style and he sets his first steps towards impressionism. Yet soon he would develop his own realistic style, close to impressionism. In 1881 he exhibited for the first time at the Salon in Brussels.
First trip to Morocco
The next year he travelled (following the footsteps of Jean-Francois Portaels) extensively in Spain and Morocco together with his friend Frantz Charlet and the Asturian painter Dario de Regoyos. He admired in the Museo del Prado especially the "old masters". In Sevilla they met Constantin Meunier, who was copying Pedro de Campana's Descent from the Cross. From this Spanish trip stem the following portraits : Spanish woman (1881) and Sevillian woman (1882), already completely different in style. When he set foot in Tanger at the end of October 1882, a whole new world opened for him: so close to Europe and yet completely different. He would stay there for four months, drawing and painting the picturesque scenes on the street, the kasbah and in the souk: Arabian street cobbler (1882), Arabian boy (1882), Resting guard (1883)
Back in Belgium, he showed about 30 works of his trip at the "Cercle Artistique et Litteraire" in Ghent. It was an instant success, especially The kef smokers, The orange seller and a seascape The strait (setting sun), Tanger (1882).
In April 1883 he exhibited these scenes of everyday Mediterranean life at the salon L'Essor in Brussels before an enthusiast public. It was also around this time that he became befriended with the writer and poet Emile Verhaeren, who would later be portrayed several times by van Rysselberghe.
In September 1883 van Rysselberghe went to Haarlem to study the light in the works of Frans Hals. The accurate rendering of light would continue to occupy his mind. He also met there the American painter William Merritt Chase.
Les XX
Theo Van Rysselberghe was one of the prominent co-founders of the Belgian artistic circle Les XX on 28 October 1883. This was a circle of young radical artists, under the patronage, as secretary, of the Brussels jurist and art lover Octave Maus (1856-1919). They rebelled against the outmoded academism of that time and the prevailing artistic standards. Among the most notable members were James Ensor, Willy Finch, Fernand Khnopff, Felicien Rops, and later Auguste Rodin and Paul Signac. This membership brought van Rysselberghe in contact with other radical artists, such as James McNeil Whistler, who had exhibited in Les XX in 1884. His influence as a portrait painter can be seen in van Rysselberghe's portrait of Octave Maus as a dandy (1885). Van Rysselberghe would paint several portraits of Octave Maus and his wife between 1883 and 1890.
Second trip to Morocco
In November 1883 he left again, together with Frantz Charlet, for Tanger. During his stay of one year, he was in constant correspondence with Octave Maus, urging him to accept several new names for the first exhibition of "Les XX": Constantin Meunier, Alfred Verwee, William Merritt Chase. (He had met him in 1883 in Haarlem.) In April 1884 he visited Andalusia in the company of the American painter John Singer Sargent and the gentleman-painter Ralph Curtis. He also invited them at the exhibition in Brussels. This time, van Rysselberghe tried to surpass himself. His exotic, large painting Arabian phantasia, a theme introduced by Eugene Delacroix, is his best known work from this period. It is bathed in the harsh light of the hot Moroccan sun. From now on van Rysselberghe would be obsessed by light. But lack of funds forced him to come back to Belgium at the end of October 1884.
At the second show of Les XX in 1885 Theo van Rysselberghe showed his Arabian phantasia and other images and paintings from his second Moroccan trip, such as Abraham Sicsu (interpreter in Tanger) (1884).
Impressionism
Yet his next portraits are in rather subdued colours, using different black or purple gradations contrasting with light colours: Jeanne and Marguerite Schlobach (1884), Octave Maus (1885), Camille Van Mons (1886), Marguerite Van Mons (1886) (to be compared with Portrait of Gabrielle Braun (1886) byFernand Khnopff).
He saw the works of the impressionists Monet and Auguste Renoir at the show of Les XX in 1886. He was deeply impressed. He experimented with this technique, as can be seen in Woman with Japanese album (1886). This impressionist influence became prominent in his paintings Madame Picard in her Loge (1886) and Madame Oscar Ghysbrecht (1886) (painted in a palette of bright colours). In 1887 he painted some impressionist seascapes at the Belgian coast : Het Zwin at high tide (1887)
Because of his growing ties with the Parisian art scene, Octave Maus sent him as a talent scout to Paris to look out for new talent for the next exhibitions of Les XX.
Neo-impressionism
He discovered the pointillist technique when he saw Georges Seurat's La Grande Jatte at the eighth impressionist exhibition in Paris in 1886. This shook him up completely. Together with Henry Van de Velde, Georges Lemmen, Xavier Mellery, Willy Herman Schlobach and Alfred William Finch and Anna Boch he "imported" this style to Belgium. Seurat was invited to the next salon of Les XX in Brussels in 1887. But there his La Grande Jatte was heavily criticized by the art critics as "incomprehensible gibberish applied to the noble art of painting".
Theo van Rysselberghe abandoned realism and became an adept of pointillism. This brought him sometimes in heavy conflict with James Ensor. In 1887 van Rysselberghe already experimented with this style, as can be seen in his Madame Oscar Ghysbrecht (1887) and Madame Edmond Picard (1887). While staying in summer 1887 a few weeks with Eugene Boch (brother of Anna Boch) in Batignolles, near Paris, he met several painters from the Parisian scene such as Sisley, Signac, Degas and especially Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. He appreciated especially the talent of Toulouse-Lautrec. His portrait Pierre-Marie Olin (1887) closely resembles the style of Toulouse-Lautrec of that time. He managed to invite several of them, including Signac, Forain, and Toulouse-Lautrec to the next exhibition of Les XX.
Third trip to Morocco
In December 1887 he was invited, together with Edmond Picard, to accompany a Belgian economic delegation to Meknes, Morocco. During these three months he made many color pencil sketches. He also drew a portrait of the sultan Hassan I. Back in Brussels, he started painting his impressions, relying on his photos, notes and sketches. His Nomad encampment (1887) is probably his first neo-impressionist work. In the Caravan in the mountains past Schliat, the influence of Seurat is unmistakable. His Gate of Mansour-El-Hay in Meknes (1887) and Morocco (the great souk) (1887) are also painted in pointillist style, but still with short strokes and not with points. These are among the rare pointillist paintings of Morocco. When he had finished these paintings, he stopped completely with this Moroccan period in his life.
He now turned to portraiture, resulting in a series of remarkable neo-impressionist portraits.
Pointillism
His famous portrait of Alice Sethe (1888) in blue and gold would become a turning point in his life. This time he used merely points in the portrait. She would later marry the sculptor Paul Dubois. Her sister, Maria Sethe, also a model of van Rysselberghe, would marry the renowned Art Nouveau architect Henry Van de Velde. In that period he made many Neo-impressionistic portraits, such as the portrait of his wife Maria and their daughter Elisabeth. He had married Marie Monnom in 1889. They went on their honeymoon to the south of England and then to Brittany. This would also result in a number of Neo-impressionistic paintings. In Paris he had a meeting with Theo Van Gogh and managed thus to invite Vincent Van Gogh to the next exhibition in Brussels. That is where Van Gogh sold Vigne Rouge in Montmajour to Anna Boch, the only painting he ever sold.
Apart from the portraits, he also painted in this period many landscapes and seascapes : "Dunes in Cadzand" (1893), "The rainbow" (1894).
In the 1895 he made long journeys to Athens and Constantinople, Hungary, Romania, Moscow and Saint Petersburg in order to make posters for the "Compagnie des Wagons-lits". One famous work is the poster "Royal Palace Hotel, Ostende" (1899).
In 1897, van Rysselberghe moved to Paris. Along with Paul Signac, Maximilien Luce, Aristide Delannoy, Alexandre Steinlen, Camille Pissarro, Van Dongen, George Willaume, etc., he contributed to the anarchist magazine Temps Nouveaux.
In the final years of the 1890s, Theo van Rysselberghe had reached the climax of his Neo-impressionist technique. Slowly he abandoned the use of dots in his portraits and landscapes and began applying somewhat broader strokes : The hippodrome at Boulogne-sur-Mer (1900) and the group portrait Summer afternoon (1900), Young women on the beach (1901), Young girl with straw bonnet (1901), and The Reading (1903) (with the contrast between red and blue colours).
After all his years as talent scout for Octave Maus, van Rysselberghe made the mistake of his life: he didn't recognize the talent of the young Pablo Picasso (who was in his Blue Period at that time). He found his works "ugly and uninteresting".
Later years
After 1903, his pointillist technique, which he had used for so many years, became more relaxed and after 1910 he abandoned it completely. His strokes had become longer and he used more often vivid colours and more intense contrasts, or softened hues. He had become a master in applying light and heat in his paintings. His Olive trees near Nice (1905) remind us of the technique used by Vincent Van Gogh. These longer strokes in red and mauve become prominent in his Bathing ladies under the pine trees at Cavaliere (1905)
After some prospecting, touring on his bike, together with his friend Henri-Edmond Cross, of the Mediterranean coast between Hyeres and Monaco, he found an interesting spot in Saint-Clair (where Cross already resided). His brother (and neighbour), the architect Octave van Rysselberghe, built him there a residence in 1911. He retired now to the Cote d'Azur and became more and more detached from the Brussels art scene.
Here he continued painting, mostly landscapes of the Mediterranean coast, portraits (of his wife and daughter, and of his brother Octave) and decorative murals. From 1905 on, the female nude becomes prominent in his monumental paintings : "After the bath" (1910). His painting The vines in October (1912) is painted in lively colours of red, green and blue. One of his last works was Girl in a bath tub (1925).
At the end of his life, he also turned to portrait sculpture, such as the Head of Andre Gide.
He died in Saint-Clair on 14 December 1926 and was buried in the cemetery of Lavandou, next to his friend and painter Henri-Edmond Cross.
Much of the works of one of the greatest neo-impressionist painters still remain in private collections. They can only rarely be seen. One recent occasion was the retrospective Theo van Rysselberghe in Brussels and later in The Hague between February and September 2006. In November 2005, his work Port Cette (1892) fetched a record 2.6m € at an auction in New York.
His brother Octave van Rysselberghe (1855-1929) was a famous Belgian architect, who collaborated with Joseph Poelaert and Henry Van de Velde.
Early years
Born in Ghent to a French-speaking bourgeois family, he studied first at the Academy of Ghent under Theo Canneel and from 1879 at the Academy of Brussels under the directorship of Jean-Francois Portaels. The North African paintings of Portaels had started an orientalist fashion in Belgium. Their impact would strongly influence the young Theo van Rysselberghe. Between 1882 and 1888 he made three trips to Morocco, staying there a total of one year and half.
Barely 18 years old, he already participated at the Salon of Ghent, showing two portraits. Soon afterwards followed his Self-portrait with pipe (1880), painted in somber colours in the Belgian realistic tradition of that time. His Child in an open spot of the forest (1880) already departs from this style and he sets his first steps towards impressionism. Yet soon he would develop his own realistic style, close to impressionism. In 1881 he exhibited for the first time at the Salon in Brussels.
First trip to Morocco
The next year he travelled (following the footsteps of Jean-Francois Portaels) extensively in Spain and Morocco together with his friend Frantz Charlet and the Asturian painter Dario de Regoyos. He admired in the Museo del Prado especially the "old masters". In Sevilla they met Constantin Meunier, who was copying Pedro de Campana's Descent from the Cross. From this Spanish trip stem the following portraits : Spanish woman (1881) and Sevillian woman (1882), already completely different in style. When he set foot in Tanger at the end of October 1882, a whole new world opened for him: so close to Europe and yet completely different. He would stay there for four months, drawing and painting the picturesque scenes on the street, the kasbah and in the souk: Arabian street cobbler (1882), Arabian boy (1882), Resting guard (1883)
Back in Belgium, he showed about 30 works of his trip at the "Cercle Artistique et Litteraire" in Ghent. It was an instant success, especially The kef smokers, The orange seller and a seascape The strait (setting sun), Tanger (1882).
In April 1883 he exhibited these scenes of everyday Mediterranean life at the salon L'Essor in Brussels before an enthusiast public. It was also around this time that he became befriended with the writer and poet Emile Verhaeren, who would later be portrayed several times by van Rysselberghe.
In September 1883 van Rysselberghe went to Haarlem to study the light in the works of Frans Hals. The accurate rendering of light would continue to occupy his mind. He also met there the American painter William Merritt Chase.
Les XX
Theo Van Rysselberghe was one of the prominent co-founders of the Belgian artistic circle Les XX on 28 October 1883. This was a circle of young radical artists, under the patronage, as secretary, of the Brussels jurist and art lover Octave Maus (1856-1919). They rebelled against the outmoded academism of that time and the prevailing artistic standards. Among the most notable members were James Ensor, Willy Finch, Fernand Khnopff, Felicien Rops, and later Auguste Rodin and Paul Signac. This membership brought van Rysselberghe in contact with other radical artists, such as James McNeil Whistler, who had exhibited in Les XX in 1884. His influence as a portrait painter can be seen in van Rysselberghe's portrait of Octave Maus as a dandy (1885). Van Rysselberghe would paint several portraits of Octave Maus and his wife between 1883 and 1890.
Second trip to Morocco
In November 1883 he left again, together with Frantz Charlet, for Tanger. During his stay of one year, he was in constant correspondence with Octave Maus, urging him to accept several new names for the first exhibition of "Les XX": Constantin Meunier, Alfred Verwee, William Merritt Chase. (He had met him in 1883 in Haarlem.) In April 1884 he visited Andalusia in the company of the American painter John Singer Sargent and the gentleman-painter Ralph Curtis. He also invited them at the exhibition in Brussels. This time, van Rysselberghe tried to surpass himself. His exotic, large painting Arabian phantasia, a theme introduced by Eugene Delacroix, is his best known work from this period. It is bathed in the harsh light of the hot Moroccan sun. From now on van Rysselberghe would be obsessed by light. But lack of funds forced him to come back to Belgium at the end of October 1884.
At the second show of Les XX in 1885 Theo van Rysselberghe showed his Arabian phantasia and other images and paintings from his second Moroccan trip, such as Abraham Sicsu (interpreter in Tanger) (1884).
Impressionism
Yet his next portraits are in rather subdued colours, using different black or purple gradations contrasting with light colours: Jeanne and Marguerite Schlobach (1884), Octave Maus (1885), Camille Van Mons (1886), Marguerite Van Mons (1886) (to be compared with Portrait of Gabrielle Braun (1886) byFernand Khnopff).
He saw the works of the impressionists Monet and Auguste Renoir at the show of Les XX in 1886. He was deeply impressed. He experimented with this technique, as can be seen in Woman with Japanese album (1886). This impressionist influence became prominent in his paintings Madame Picard in her Loge (1886) and Madame Oscar Ghysbrecht (1886) (painted in a palette of bright colours). In 1887 he painted some impressionist seascapes at the Belgian coast : Het Zwin at high tide (1887)
Because of his growing ties with the Parisian art scene, Octave Maus sent him as a talent scout to Paris to look out for new talent for the next exhibitions of Les XX.
Neo-impressionism
He discovered the pointillist technique when he saw Georges Seurat's La Grande Jatte at the eighth impressionist exhibition in Paris in 1886. This shook him up completely. Together with Henry Van de Velde, Georges Lemmen, Xavier Mellery, Willy Herman Schlobach and Alfred William Finch and Anna Boch he "imported" this style to Belgium. Seurat was invited to the next salon of Les XX in Brussels in 1887. But there his La Grande Jatte was heavily criticized by the art critics as "incomprehensible gibberish applied to the noble art of painting".
Theo van Rysselberghe abandoned realism and became an adept of pointillism. This brought him sometimes in heavy conflict with James Ensor. In 1887 van Rysselberghe already experimented with this style, as can be seen in his Madame Oscar Ghysbrecht (1887) and Madame Edmond Picard (1887). While staying in summer 1887 a few weeks with Eugene Boch (brother of Anna Boch) in Batignolles, near Paris, he met several painters from the Parisian scene such as Sisley, Signac, Degas and especially Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. He appreciated especially the talent of Toulouse-Lautrec. His portrait Pierre-Marie Olin (1887) closely resembles the style of Toulouse-Lautrec of that time. He managed to invite several of them, including Signac, Forain, and Toulouse-Lautrec to the next exhibition of Les XX.
Third trip to Morocco
In December 1887 he was invited, together with Edmond Picard, to accompany a Belgian economic delegation to Meknes, Morocco. During these three months he made many color pencil sketches. He also drew a portrait of the sultan Hassan I. Back in Brussels, he started painting his impressions, relying on his photos, notes and sketches. His Nomad encampment (1887) is probably his first neo-impressionist work. In the Caravan in the mountains past Schliat, the influence of Seurat is unmistakable. His Gate of Mansour-El-Hay in Meknes (1887) and Morocco (the great souk) (1887) are also painted in pointillist style, but still with short strokes and not with points. These are among the rare pointillist paintings of Morocco. When he had finished these paintings, he stopped completely with this Moroccan period in his life.
He now turned to portraiture, resulting in a series of remarkable neo-impressionist portraits.
Pointillism
His famous portrait of Alice Sethe (1888) in blue and gold would become a turning point in his life. This time he used merely points in the portrait. She would later marry the sculptor Paul Dubois. Her sister, Maria Sethe, also a model of van Rysselberghe, would marry the renowned Art Nouveau architect Henry Van de Velde. In that period he made many Neo-impressionistic portraits, such as the portrait of his wife Maria and their daughter Elisabeth. He had married Marie Monnom in 1889. They went on their honeymoon to the south of England and then to Brittany. This would also result in a number of Neo-impressionistic paintings. In Paris he had a meeting with Theo Van Gogh and managed thus to invite Vincent Van Gogh to the next exhibition in Brussels. That is where Van Gogh sold Vigne Rouge in Montmajour to Anna Boch, the only painting he ever sold.
Apart from the portraits, he also painted in this period many landscapes and seascapes : "Dunes in Cadzand" (1893), "The rainbow" (1894).
In the 1895 he made long journeys to Athens and Constantinople, Hungary, Romania, Moscow and Saint Petersburg in order to make posters for the "Compagnie des Wagons-lits". One famous work is the poster "Royal Palace Hotel, Ostende" (1899).
In 1897, van Rysselberghe moved to Paris. Along with Paul Signac, Maximilien Luce, Aristide Delannoy, Alexandre Steinlen, Camille Pissarro, Van Dongen, George Willaume, etc., he contributed to the anarchist magazine Temps Nouveaux.
In the final years of the 1890s, Theo van Rysselberghe had reached the climax of his Neo-impressionist technique. Slowly he abandoned the use of dots in his portraits and landscapes and began applying somewhat broader strokes : The hippodrome at Boulogne-sur-Mer (1900) and the group portrait Summer afternoon (1900), Young women on the beach (1901), Young girl with straw bonnet (1901), and The Reading (1903) (with the contrast between red and blue colours).
After all his years as talent scout for Octave Maus, van Rysselberghe made the mistake of his life: he didn't recognize the talent of the young Pablo Picasso (who was in his Blue Period at that time). He found his works "ugly and uninteresting".
Later years
After 1903, his pointillist technique, which he had used for so many years, became more relaxed and after 1910 he abandoned it completely. His strokes had become longer and he used more often vivid colours and more intense contrasts, or softened hues. He had become a master in applying light and heat in his paintings. His Olive trees near Nice (1905) remind us of the technique used by Vincent Van Gogh. These longer strokes in red and mauve become prominent in his Bathing ladies under the pine trees at Cavaliere (1905)
After some prospecting, touring on his bike, together with his friend Henri-Edmond Cross, of the Mediterranean coast between Hyeres and Monaco, he found an interesting spot in Saint-Clair (where Cross already resided). His brother (and neighbour), the architect Octave van Rysselberghe, built him there a residence in 1911. He retired now to the Cote d'Azur and became more and more detached from the Brussels art scene.
Here he continued painting, mostly landscapes of the Mediterranean coast, portraits (of his wife and daughter, and of his brother Octave) and decorative murals. From 1905 on, the female nude becomes prominent in his monumental paintings : "After the bath" (1910). His painting The vines in October (1912) is painted in lively colours of red, green and blue. One of his last works was Girl in a bath tub (1925).
At the end of his life, he also turned to portrait sculpture, such as the Head of Andre Gide.
He died in Saint-Clair on 14 December 1926 and was buried in the cemetery of Lavandou, next to his friend and painter Henri-Edmond Cross.
Much of the works of one of the greatest neo-impressionist painters still remain in private collections. They can only rarely be seen. One recent occasion was the retrospective Theo van Rysselberghe in Brussels and later in The Hague between February and September 2006. In November 2005, his work Port Cette (1892) fetched a record 2.6m € at an auction in New York.
His brother Octave van Rysselberghe (1855-1929) was a famous Belgian architect, who collaborated with Joseph Poelaert and Henry Van de Velde.
57 Rysselberghe Paintings
Paul Signac Aboard His Sailboat 1886
Oil Painting
$955
$955
Canvas Print
$62.01
$62.01
SKU: RTV-16338
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: unknown
Private Collection
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: unknown
Private Collection
Irma Sethe 1894
Oil Painting
$1349
$1349
Canvas Print
$50.00
$50.00
SKU: RTV-16339
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: unknown
Musee d'Orsay, Paris, France
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: unknown
Musee d'Orsay, Paris, France
The Lecture by Emile Verhaeren (Reading in Saint-Cloud) 1903
Oil Painting
$1974
$1974
Canvas Print
$56.08
$56.08
SKU: RTV-16340
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 181 x 241 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Ghent, Belgium
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 181 x 241 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Ghent, Belgium
Family in an Orchard 1890
Oil Painting
$2757
$2757
Canvas Print
$53.73
$53.73
SKU: RTV-16341
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 115.5 x 163.5 cm
Kroller-Mueller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 115.5 x 163.5 cm
Kroller-Mueller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands
Emile Verhaeren 1915
Oil Painting
$844
$844
Canvas Print
$62.83
$62.83
SKU: RTV-16342
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 77.5 x 92 cm
Musee d'Orsay, Paris, France
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 77.5 x 92 cm
Musee d'Orsay, Paris, France
Maria Sethe at the Harmonium 1891
Oil Painting
$1257
$1257
Canvas Print
$53.05
$53.05
SKU: RTV-16343
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 118 x 84.5 cm
Koninklijk Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp, Belgium
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 118 x 84.5 cm
Koninklijk Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp, Belgium
Self-Portrait b.1926
Oil Painting
$636
$636
Canvas Print
$51.94
$51.94
SKU: RTV-16344
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 60 x 40.5 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Ghent, Belgium
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 60 x 40.5 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Ghent, Belgium
Portrait of Margueritte van Mons b.1926
Oil Painting
$824
$824
Canvas Print
$59.80
$59.80
SKU: RTV-16345
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 89.5 x 70.5 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Ghent, Belgium
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 89.5 x 70.5 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Ghent, Belgium
The Valley of the Sambre b.1926
Oil Painting
$947
$947
Canvas Print
$61.59
$61.59
SKU: RTV-16346
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: unknown
Museum of Fine Arts, Ghent, Belgium
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: unknown
Museum of Fine Arts, Ghent, Belgium
Madame Monnom 1900
Oil Painting
$1558
$1558
Canvas Print
$57.45
$57.45
SKU: RTV-16347
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 117 x 90 cm
The Clark Art Institute, Massachusetts, USA
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 117 x 90 cm
The Clark Art Institute, Massachusetts, USA
Lady in White (Portrait of Mrs. Theo Van Rysselberghe) 1926
Oil Painting
$1344
$1344
Canvas Print
$60.07
$60.07
SKU: RTV-16348
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 91.5 x 73 cm
Public Collection
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 91.5 x 73 cm
Public Collection
Bust of a Young Girl 1914
Oil Painting
$616
$616
Canvas Print
$62.97
$62.97
SKU: RTV-16349
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 56 x 46.5 cm
Private Collection
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 56 x 46.5 cm
Private Collection
Nude Girl in Front of the Mirror 1900
Oil Painting
$872
$872
Canvas Print
$57.32
$57.32
SKU: RTV-16350
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: unknown
Public Collection
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: unknown
Public Collection
Young Woman in Green Dress (Germaine Marechal) 1893
Oil Painting
$1128
$1128
Canvas Print
$56.08
$56.08
SKU: RTV-16351
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 81.7 x 60.6 cm
Private Collection
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 81.7 x 60.6 cm
Private Collection
The Mediterranean at Le Lavandou 1904
Oil Painting
$811
$811
Canvas Print
$60.62
$60.62
SKU: RTV-16352
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 81.5 x 65.5 cm
The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 81.5 x 65.5 cm
The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel
Big Clouds 1893
Oil Painting
$729
$729
Canvas Print
$51.74
$51.74
SKU: RTV-16353
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 49.5 x 59.7 cm
Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indiana, USA
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 49.5 x 59.7 cm
Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indiana, USA
Portrait of Sylvie Lacombe 1906
Oil Painting
$802
$802
Canvas Print
$63.38
$63.38
SKU: RTV-16354
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 60.3 x 73 cm
Private Collection
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 60.3 x 73 cm
Private Collection
Resting Nude Model 1914
Oil Painting
$906
$906
Canvas Print
$50.00
$50.00
SKU: RTV-16355
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 93.5 x 146 cm
Private Collection
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 93.5 x 146 cm
Private Collection
Mme Bodenhausen with a Child 1910
Oil Painting
$1022
$1022
Canvas Print
$60.76
$60.76
SKU: RTV-16356
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 117 x 94.2 cm
Private Collection
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 117 x 94.2 cm
Private Collection
La pointe du Rossignol 1904
Oil Painting
$742
$742
Canvas Print
$63.52
$63.52
SKU: RTV-16357
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 46 x 56 cm
Private Collection
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 46 x 56 cm
Private Collection
Madame Edmond Picard in the Box of Theatre de la ... 1887
Oil Painting
$896
$896
Canvas Print
$65.86
$65.86
SKU: RTV-16358
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 73 x 85 cm
Private Collection
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 73 x 85 cm
Private Collection
Landscape with Houses 1894
Oil Painting
$781
$781
Canvas Print
$50.00
$50.00
SKU: RTV-16359
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 50.5 x 77 cm
Private Collection
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 50.5 x 77 cm
Private Collection
Portrait of Camille van Mons 1886
Oil Painting
$831
$831
SKU: RTV-16360
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: unknown
Public Collection
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: unknown
Public Collection
La pointe du Rossignol (Cap Layet) 1905
Oil Painting
$795
$795
Canvas Print
$65.45
$65.45
SKU: RTV-16361
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 73.5 x 85 cm
Private Collection
Theo van Rysselberghe
Original Size: 73.5 x 85 cm
Private Collection