Portrait of Madame Léon Maître (Portrait de Madame Léon Maître) Henri Fantin-Latour (French, 1836-1904). , 1882. Oil on canvas, 50 × 55 1/8 in., 122 lb. (127 × 140 cm, ). Henri Fantin-Latour imbued his sitter—the sister-in-law of a friend—with an air of introspective melancholy, and the delicately rendered jewelry, fan, and corsage reveal his talent for still life. While working on this portrait, the artist likely saw A Bar at the Folies-Bergère in the studio of his longtime friend Édouard Manet. Madame Maître’s black, lace-trimmed evening dress, her choker, and the flowers at her déco


Portrait of Madame Léon Maître (Portrait de Madame Léon Maître) Henri Fantin-Latour (French, 1836-1904). , 1882. Oil on canvas, 50 × 55 1/8 in., 122 lb. (127 × 140 cm, ). Henri Fantin-Latour imbued his sitter—the sister-in-law of a friend—with an air of introspective melancholy, and the delicately rendered jewelry, fan, and corsage reveal his talent for still life. While working on this portrait, the artist likely saw A Bar at the Folies-Bergère in the studio of his longtime friend Édouard Manet. Madame Maître’s black, lace-trimmed evening dress, her choker, and the flowers at her décolletage are similar to the barmaid’s. Both paintings were displayed at the 1882 Paris Salon, but whereas Manet’s ambiguous scene of a lower-class woman at work caused a public sensation, critics praised Fantin-Latour’s more sedate portraits, such as this one, as exemplars of femininity and breeding: “No one expresses like Monsieur Fantin-Latour the freshness of flowers and the natural gentleness of women of good solid bourgeois stock.” European Art 1882


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Photo credit: © BBM / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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