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Berthe Morisot – French 1841-1895




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Berthe Morisot Self Portrait, 1885
Self Portrait, 1885
Berthe Morisot was a French painter and printmaker who exhibited regularly with the Impressionists and, despite the protests of friends and family, continued to participate in their struggle for recognition.

The daughter of a high government official (and a granddaughter of the important Rococo painter Jean-Honoré Fragonard), Morisot decided early to be an artist and pursued her goal with seriousness and dedication. From 1862 to 1868 she worked under the guidance of Camille Corot. She first exhibited paintings at the Salon in 1864. Her work was exhibited there regularly through 1874, when she vowed never to show her paintings in the officially sanctioned forum again. In 1868 she met Edouard Manet, who was to exert a tremendous influence over her work. He did several portraits of her (e.g., “Repose,” c. 1870). Manet had a liberating effect on her work, and she in turn aroused his interest in outdoor painting.

Berthe MorisotMorisot's work never lost its Manet-like quality—an insistence on design—nor did she become as involved in colour-optical experimentation as her fellow Impressionists. Her paintings frequently included members of her family, particularly her sister, Edma (e.g., “The Artist's Sister, Mme Pontillon, Seated on the Grass,” 1873; and “The Artist's Sister Edma and Their Mother,” 1870). Delicate and subtle, exquisite in colour—often with a subdued emerald glow—they won her the admiration of her Impressionist colleagues. Like that of the other Impressionists, her work was ridiculed by many critics. Never commercially successful during her lifetime, she nevertheless outsold Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, and Alfred Sisley. She was a woman of great culture and charm and counted among her close friends Stéphane Mallarmé, Edgar Degas, Charles Baudelaire, Émile Zola, Emmanuel Chabrier, Renoir, and Monet. She married Édouard Manet's younger brother Eugène.

(also see Women Artists)

Search for all Berthe Morisot items on AMAZON.
Berthe Morisot: Le Secret de la femme en noir by Dominique Bona – Paperback Publisher: Le Livre De Poche (October 15, 2002)

Reader review: Dominique Bona has produced a fine portrait of this woman who was the only représentant of her sex among the impressionists. Berthe Morisot had a close relationship with Edouard Manet (she married his brother Eugene).Along the way,the book lets you know the other artists of this movement: Monet, Degas, Renoir etc.The struggles of their acceptance is well documented. Nowadays,the literature about the impressionist school is abondant. After all,this was the beginning of modern art. Dominique Bona is a gifted writer who wrote other biographies and a few novels.

Berthe Morisot by Anne Higonnet – Paperback, 240 pages (June 1995) Univ California Press

Berthe Morisot (1841-1895) was one of the founders of Impressionism. She was also a brilliant interpreter of femininity. Morisot's luminous images of women's daily experience tapped the resources of both a widespread women's amateur painting tradition and an elite artistic avant-garde. Anne Higonnet, Assistant Professor of Art History at Wellesley College and a noted authority on Morisot, describes the development of the artist's style, subject matter, and career. She shows how Morisot, by participating in the most radical art movement of her time, became able to express her unique vision.

Berthe Morisot: Impressionist by Charles F. Stuckey, W. P. Scott, Suzanne G. Lindsay Hardcover: 228 pages Publisher: Rizzoli Intl Pubns; 1st ed edition (October 1987)

Morisot was a gutsy pioneer among the French impressionists. As a standard-bearer of the avant-garde, she created a scandal by helping to organize a public auction of their works, something very few artists had dared to do. Defying the advice of her parents and Manet, she remained in Paris when Prussian troops besieged the city. In her artistic technique she was no less daring. Around 1874, in pictures of tourists and yacht-filled rivers, she broke through to an abbreviated, shorthand style ahead of her contemporaries. Disregarding her own view that Monet had taken landscape painting to its farthest limits, her late oils of gardens are brilliant fireworks of color.
Berthe Morisot: La Belle Peintre by Jean-Dominique Rey – Hardcover Publisher: Flammarion (March 24, 2002)

Berthe Morisot: The First Lady of Impressionism by Margaret Shennan – Paperback, 352 pages (June 2000) Sutton Publishing;

Midwest Book Review: This biographical portrait of the first lady of Impressionism provides college-level readers with an in-depth study of Morisot's life and contributions to the art. Mystery and myth have surrounded her life and contributed to many fallacies: Shennan's research contributes to a very different view of Morisot's personality and achievements.

Berthe Morisot by Kathleen Adler, Tamar Garb – Paperback, 128 pages Reprint edition (October 1995) Phaidon Press Inc.

Six Berthe Morisot Cards (Small-Format Card Books) – Paperback: 6 pages Publisher: Dover Publications (January 10, 2001)

6 of noted Impressionist painter's best-known works: The Cradle, The Mother and Sister of the Artist, The Butterfly Hunt, Hide and Seek, 2 more.

Berthe Morisot (The Q.L.P. Art Series) by Jean Dominique Rey – Hardcover: 95 pages Publisher: Crown (December 28, 1987) Text: English, French (translation)

Berthe Morisot by Hugues Wilheml – Paperback Publisher: Fondation Pierre Gianadda (July 10, 2002)



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