MORISOT, Berthe - b. 1841 Bourges, d. 1895 Paris - WGA

MORISOT, Berthe

(b. 1841 Bourges, d. 1895 Paris)

French painter and printmaker. As the child of upper middle-class parents, she was expected to be a skilled amateur artist and was thus given appropriate schooling. In 1857 she attended drawing lessons with Geoffroy-Alphonse Chocarne (active 1838-1857), but in 1858 she and her sister Edma left to study under Joseph-Benoit Guichard, a pupil of Ingres and Delacroix. In the same year they registered as copyists in the Louvre, copying Veronese and Rubens. The sisters were introduced to Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot in 1861 and took advice from him and subsequently from his pupil, Achille-François Oudinot (1820-1891). Through these artists they became familiar with current debates on naturalism and began to work en plein air, painting at Pontoise, Normandy and Brittany.

She formed a close friendship with Manet, who became her brother-in-law, and she served as model for several of his best-known paintings. The two greatly influenced each other’s artistic development. Her own later work inclined toward pure Impressionism in its rendering of light, while retaining an unusual smoothness of brushwork. Her paintings formed an important addition to all but one Impressionist exhibition from 1874 through 1885. Her most notable works, including Young Woman at the Dance (1880; Paris) and La Toilette (Art Institute, Chicago), are painted in clear, luminous colours. Her early subject matter included landscapes and marine scenes; later she most frequently painted tranquil portraits of mothers and children.

Morisot’s works have been particularly popular in the United States, and many important works are in American collections.

At the Ball
At the Ball by

At the Ball

Berthe Morisot preferred light, tender colours, had a precise eye, and took an interest in the psychological state expressed by her models. A particularly fine use of colour distinguishes At the Ball, with its slightly asymmetrical structure and the young woman’s attentive sideways look.

Morisot artistic and human qualities amply account for the high regard in which she was held by fellow painters as different in character as Renoir and Degas, Monet and Puvis de Chavannes, as well as such writers as the poet Mallarm�.

Chasing Butterflies
Chasing Butterflies by

Chasing Butterflies

Berthe Morisot enjoyed a lengthy and successful career. Free of material worries, though not of the duties of a wife and mother, she was able essentially as she pleased. Her paintings, which became increasingly unstrained in style, were predominantly impressions of happy family life or togetherness, or of the cultured, stylish life of her family and friends.

Hide and Seek
Hide and Seek by
Hortensia, or The Two Sisters
Hortensia, or The Two Sisters by

Hortensia, or The Two Sisters

In the Grass
In the Grass by
Julie Manet and Her Greyhound
Julie Manet and Her Greyhound by

Julie Manet and Her Greyhound

On a Bench in the Bois de Boulogne
On a Bench in the Bois de Boulogne by

On a Bench in the Bois de Boulogne

On the Balcony
On the Balcony by
Pasie Sewing in the Garden
Pasie Sewing in the Garden by

Pasie Sewing in the Garden

Portrait of Madame Pontillon
Portrait of Madame Pontillon by

Portrait of Madame Pontillon

Summer
Summer by
Summer Day (Bois de Boulogne)
Summer Day (Bois de Boulogne) by

Summer Day (Bois de Boulogne)

The Artist's Mother and Sister (Reading)
The Artist's Mother and Sister (Reading) by

The Artist's Mother and Sister (Reading)

Berthe Morisot was the daughter of a top-ranking civil servant and the great-niece of the eminent Rococo painter Jean-Honor� Fragonard. With her sister Edma she had taken private tuition, mainly from Corot, and from 1864 on she regularly exhibited landscapes at the Salon. The present double portrait shows her mother reading and her sister Edma on a settee listening or thinking. The picture was not only reminiscent of Manet’s Reading but was in fact so heavily reworked by him (she now regarded Manet as her teacher) that she withdraw it from the 1870 Salon, where it had been accepted - no longer feeling sure of it.

The Cheval-Glass
The Cheval-Glass by

The Cheval-Glass

Berthe Morisot’s style was principally influenced by Manet then, following his death by Renoir, in particular his paintings of women, as in the present work, in which she depicted a young woman getting dressed in front of a cheval-glass (a long mirror mounted on swivels in a frame).

The Children of Gabriel Thomas
The Children of Gabriel Thomas by

The Children of Gabriel Thomas

Gabriel-Jules Thomas (1824-1905) was a French sculptor.

The Cradle
The Cradle by
View of Paris from the Trocadéro
View of Paris from the Trocadéro by

View of Paris from the Trocadéro

Young Woman Powdering Herself
Young Woman Powdering Herself by

Young Woman Powdering Herself

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