"Allée of Chestnut Trees" by Alfred Sisley
"Allée of Chestnut Trees" by Alfred Sisley
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Landscape Printable Art (1878)
Bring serene impressionist beauty into your home with Allée of Chestnut Trees by Alfred Sisley (1878). This peaceful riverside scene, painted in soft greens and lilacs, captures a quiet stroll beneath blooming chestnut trees—perfect for timeless, nature-inspired decor.
➤ High-resolution printable artwork
➤ Ideal for lovers of Impressionism, vintage landscapes, and French countryside charm
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
Allée of Chestnut Trees by Alfred Sisley (1878).
In Allée of Chestnut Trees, Alfred Sisley proves that a walk in the park is not just good for the soul—it’s also prime material for artistic transcendence. Painted in 1878, this lush and breezy landscape captures the very heartbeat of a spring day along a tree-lined path, where the air smells faintly of lilacs, horses clop contentedly in the distance, and nobody is in a hurry—not even time itself.
Sisley, one of the most lyrical voices in the Impressionist chorus, delivers here a visual poem to dappled shade and leafy rhythm. His signature brushwork is alive and fluttering—each stroke feels like a gust of fresh air playing among the chestnut leaves. The palette is a verdant symphony: greens that flirt with purples, sun-dappled pinks on the path, and the soft blues of a river just visible through the trunks. It’s as if nature decided to put on her Sunday best and sit for a portrait.
And yet, there’s an understated humor here too. Look closely: a lone walker in the foreground appears as if they’ve stepped out just to remind us how idyllic life once was, while the horse-drawn carriage seems to politely tiptoe rather than gallop, as though aware they’re interrupting a scene far too serene for speed. Even the boats on the river appear to drift in agreement with the mood.
Allée of Chestnut Trees is not just a landscape—it’s a persuasive argument against hustle culture. Sisley invites us to slow down, look up, and breathe. He doesn’t shout through his painting; he whispers, gently tugging at our desire for peace, beauty, and maybe—just maybe—a country stroll with absolutely no notifications.
A timeless triumph of light, air, and the simple magic of trees, Sisley’s work reminds us that nature doesn’t need embellishment. It just needs someone who knows how to see it—and how to make us feel it.

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