Young Woman Reclining (Portrait of Julie Manet)

Berthe Morisot, Woman Lounging, 19th c.

Berthe Morisot, Woman Lounging, 19th c.

Name/Title

Young Woman Reclining (Portrait of Julie Manet)

Entry/Object ID

2013.9.30

Description

19th-c. drypoint depicting Julie Manet lounging by Berthe Morisot. Printed by Ambroise Vollard.

Artwork Details

Medium

Ink, Paper

Made/Created

Artist Information

Artist

Berthe Morisot

Role

Artist

Date made

1889

Dimensions

Dimension Description

Image

Height

6 in

Dimension Description

Plate dimension

Height

9-3/4 in

Width

12-3/4 in

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Credit Line

Label

Gift of the Jesuit Community at Saint Joseph’s University

Label

This etching portrays Julie Manet, the famous model and daughter of Berthe Morisot. Morisot’s depictions of her daughter accentuate the modern nature of her work that led her to be one of only two female artists associated with the French Impressionist movement. Not allowed to leave her home unchaperoned (as was custom in 19th-c. Paris), Morisot often focused on domestic scenes of close family and friends. Yet it was this constraint that allowed her to explore her distinctively light and rapid technique and method of depicting her subjects. Morisot portrayed her female subjects as individuals, avoiding overly sexual scenes and guiding viewers to see these women as they wished to be viewed. Morisot broke barriers by becoming a professional artist at a time when women were expected to marry and tend to their family. Berthe Morisot was not just a ‘female artist’, her radical style transcended limitations of the modernist movement as a whole, proving just how far female expressive capabilities were able to extend.