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Course: For teachers > Unit 2
Lesson 5: Go deeper: where are the women artists?- Christine de Pizan and a City of Ladies
- Female artists in the renaissance
- Introduction to gender in renaissance Italy
- Rachel Ruysch, Fruit and Insects
- Emily Mary Osborn, Nameless and Friendless
- Morisot, The Cradle
- A summer day in Paris: Morisot's Hunting Butterflies
- Judy Chicago, The Dinner Party
- Ringgold, Dancing at the Louvre
- Shirin Neshat, Rebellious Silence, Women of Allah series
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Morisot, The Cradle
Berthe Morisot, The Cradle, 1872, oil on canvas, 56 x 46 cm (Musée d'Orsay, Paris). Speakers: Dr. Steven Zucker and Dr. Beth Harris. Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.
Want to join the conversation?
- This is a great video but where is the one of Mother and Sister of the Artist by Morisot gone? I was relying on that to recap before my art-history exams tomorrow !(3 votes)
Video transcript
[Jazzy piano music] [Steven] We're at the Musée d'Orsay,
and we're looking at... ...a painting by Berthe Morisot, "The Cradle". [Beth] This is a lovely
painting of a baby in a cradle,... ...being watched over by her new mother. Her later work is some of the most radical painting... ...in its extraordinary brushwork. But this is an early canvas. This was exhibited
at the Impressionist exhibition of 1874. This is an exhibition of the artists
whom we now call the "Impressionists",... ...where they exhibited independently... ...from the official art exhibitions in Paris. But sadly, this painting was little noticed
by the press and the public,... ... and remained unsold for several years,
and in the family until 1930. It was extremely difficult
to be a female painter at this time,... ...and so it's not surprising
that her work received little critical attention. There were some female painters
that were successful. I'm thinking about Rosa Bonheur, for example. But, for the most part, especially
women of Morisot's class. A woman of her level of affluence
would have a quite restricted environment... ...in which they could freely move. Women were expected to largely
exist in the domestic sphere. And, as we see in the work of so many
women artists at the end of the 19th century,... ...a lack of access to the more typical subjects... ...of modern life, of cafés and bars. This was the space that they had access to,
and that's what they painted. And Morisot would go on
to paint many beautiful scenes of family life,... ...but this one is especially poignant. What we're seeing is Morisot's sister,... ...looking over her daughter, and
there's a wonderful intimacy. The child is angelic,
draped under that gauzy net. And Morisot's sister looks down
at her with a gentle concern... ...that is really moving and beautiful. It recalls for me images of Mary, holding the Christ child. But, in those cases, Mary holds
the Christ child on her lap. Here we have a very
modern domestic setting,... ...with a cradle, and a lovely interior
in the background, with the curtain. And we have a sense
of a modern woman in modern dress. Her lowered eyelids,
the chin that rests on the hand,... ...the other arm that comes forward,
foreshortened across the cradle,... ...suggests a contemplation... ...about the serious
responsibilities of motherhood,... ...but also the incredible
affection of motherhood. The fact that this
is seen worthy as a subject... ...for a painting, is also
a reflection of the growth... ...of the idea of the middle class family
in the 19th century. That the domestic space
was a protected space,... ...an insular space. And I think we see that here. Not only is the child enveloped
in that gauzy material,... ...but Morisot's sister herself is enclosed. On one side of her,
she has the diagonal of that gauze. Above, another diagonal,
formed by the curtain. And, to the left,
the edge of the painting. So, she is also rather locked
into this domestic space. I wanna spend just a moment
looking at the brushwork. Although there are
some fine linear passages... ...that are almost drawn,
for instance the fine locks of hair... ...that fall down the woman's temple,
much of the brushwork... ...is quite loose,
and anticipates Morisot's later style. Look, for example, at the pink fringe,
at the edge of the netting. Or the way in which
the collar of the woman is rendered. There's a beautiful looseness here, that shows... Morisot's extraordinary
facility with paint. Virtuosity is what comes to mind,... ...when I think of Morisot
and the handling of paint. I notice it also
in the white touches of paint... ...that form the top of the curtain. Or even, in her sleeve,
those quick circular movements of paint,... ...that suggest the texture of her dress. And, then there's choices that Morisot makes... ...in terms of where our
attention is going to fall. Look at the way in which
the woman's fingers are painted so flatly. The upper parts of the fingers,
which are foreshortened,... ...are virtually not articulated at all. All that she's chosen to give us
is the flat plains of the fingers,... ...that are exposed directly to us. I love those fingers,
their slight sense of fidgetiness. Unfortunately, I think
we still have a tendency... ...to discount images of mothers and children,... ...to see them nostalgically and sentimentally. And, if we look
around the galleries of the d'Orsay,... ...almost every painting is by a man. Morisot is an exception. And, if we look at auction prices, if we look at the art market,... ..female artists are still
not given their due. [Jazzy piano music]