The Impressionism

 



Art Styles in 19th century - Art Map



 




Berthe Morisot



 


 
Berthe Morisot

(b Bourges, Cher, 14 Jan 1841; d Paris, 2 March 1895).

French painter and printmaker. As the child of upper middle-class parents, Marie-Joséphine-Cornélie and Edme Tiburce Morisot, 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 ( fl 1838–57), but in 1858 she and her sister Edma left to study under Joseph-Benoît 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 (1820–91). Through these artists they became familiar with current debates on naturalism and began to work en plein air, painting at Pontoise, Normandy and Brittany (e.g. Thatched Cottage in Normandy, 1865; priv. col.).

 




 

Portrait of Mme. Boursier and her Daughter
1874
Brooklyn Museum, New York
 



 


Behind the Blinds
 


 


Boats on the Seine
1880



 

In a Villa at the Seaside
1874
Museum of Art, Pasadena



 

Calvary
(after Veronese)
1858



 

The Cheval Glass



 

Mme. Hubard
1874



 

At the Ball



 

Hanging the Laundry out to Dry
1875
National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.



 

Boats - Entry to the Medina in the Isle of Wight



 

Jeune Fille en Blanc