"A Road in Louveciennes" by Auguste Renoir
"A Road in Louveciennes" by Auguste Renoir
No se pudo cargar la disponibilidad de retiro
Landscape Printable Art (1870)
Step into the French countryside with A Road in Louveciennes by Auguste Renoir (1870). This early impressionist landscape captures a quiet forest path bathed in soft light, with figures strolling beneath lush trees—perfect for adding elegance and calm to your space.
➤ High-resolution printable artwork
➤ Ideal for impressionist art lovers, vintage nature scenes, and classic French decor
Pixartiko Collective – Usage License
Prints allowed for personal use and resale only as physical products in local shops. Use in other physical goods permitted if pixartiko.com is credited when possible.
Digital resale, sharing, or publishing is strictly forbidden.
Designs are not public domain and cannot be distributed online.
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Print Sizes
🖼 Included Print Sizes (No Cropping Needed)
This high resolution digital file is optimized for printing at the following standard sizes, no cropping or borders required. Just download, print, and frame:
Inches | Centimeters | Suggested Use |
---|---|---|
24 x 20 | 61.0 x 50.8 | Gallery prints, decorative wall art |
18 x 15 | 45.7 x 38.1 | Premium photo prints, framed artworks |
12 x 10 | 30.5 x 25.4 | Framed photo enlargements, home decor |
9 x 7.5 | 22.9 x 19.1 | Small art prints, compact display pieces |
6 x 5 | 15.2 x 12.7 | Mini prints, album inserts, gifts |
4.8 x 4 | 12.2 x 10.2 | Postcard-size art, desk prints |
🖨️ All sizes are print-ready at 300 DPI, maintaining the original image ratio. No cropping or borders required.
📂 Your download includes:
- 1 high resolution JPEG file (Aspect Ratio: 6:5, Landscape – Slightly Wide).
- Artistic Declaration Certificate in PDF.
- Free gift: The Ages of Painting guide — a visual journey through the history of painting.
🎨 Need a different size or format?
No problem! Just send me a message and I’ll be happy to adapt it for you.
🎧 Art Review
A Road in Louveciennes by Auguste Renoir (1870).
Before Renoir bathed dancers in golden light and set tables brimming with fruit and flirtation, he walked down a country road in Louveciennes—and lucky for us, he brought his paintbrush.
A Road in Louveciennes (1870) is a quiet masterpiece, a landscape that doesn’t shout for attention but gently waves you over like an old friend with a picnic blanket. It’s Renoir before the dazzle, capturing a slice of everyday beauty in the French countryside with a looseness and intimacy that feel almost confessional.
What we see is a sun-dappled path winding between thick summer foliage, leading our eyes toward a modest house in the distance and a group of figures gathered casually beneath a tree. The figures—perhaps a family or friends mid-stroll—are not sharply defined, but they don’t need to be. They blend naturally into the scene, part of the landscape’s rhythm rather than intrusions upon it.
The sky, with its buttery clouds and soft horizon, gives the entire canvas a sense of atmospheric lightness. Renoir’s early brushwork here is looser than his later works, but no less confident. There’s a kind of relaxed sincerity in the way light plays off the leaves and dances across the dirt road, like nature having a quiet conversation with itself.
And yet, buried in the brushstrokes is something more: a tender glimpse of human presence in nature—not dominating it, but walking gently through it. The children to the left, the women in long dresses, the small dog perhaps barely noticed—they aren’t staged. They’re simply… there. And we’re there with them.
A Road in Louveciennes is the kind of painting that makes you want to take a long walk without your phone. It’s an invitation to step back in time, not for grandeur or drama, but for a moment of peace, of sunlight, of a path that leads nowhere in particular but feels like home.
Renoir may have become the poet of Parisian leisure, but here, he whispers to us from the woods—and it’s glorious.

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