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  2. Portrait of Madeleine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait_of_Madeleine

    Portrait of Madeleine, also known as Portrait of a Black Woman (French: Portrait d'une femme noire or Portrait d'une negresse), is an oil-on-canvas painting by the French artist Marie-Guillemine Benoist, created in 1800.

  3. Black Woman with Peonies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Woman_with_Peonies

    Black Woman with Peonies by Frédéric Bazille (1870) located at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.. Black Woman with Peonies also known as Négresse aux pivoines, Young Woman with Peonies, or Negress with Peonies, is a pair of paintings created by the French Impressionist painter Frédéric Bazille in the spring of 1870.

  4. Marie-Guillemine Benoist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie-Guillemine_Benoist

    Six years previously, slavery had been abolished, and this image became a symbol for women's emancipation and black people's rights. James Smalls, a professor of Art History at the University of Maryland, declared that "the painting is an anomaly because it presents a black person as the sole aestheticized subject and object of a work of art."

  5. Liberty Leading the People - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberty_Leading_the_People

    By the time Delacroix painted Liberty Leading the People, he was already the acknowledged leader of the Romantic school in French painting. [4] Delacroix, who was born as the Age of Enlightenment was giving way to the ideas and style of romanticism, rejected the emphasis on precise drawing that characterised the academic art of his time, and instead gave a new prominence to freely brushed colour.

  6. The Gleaners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gleaners

    Millet's The Gleaners was preceded by a vertical painting of the image in 1854 and an etching in 1855. Millet unveiled The Gleaners at the Salon in 1857. It immediately drew negative criticism from the middle and upper classes, who viewed the topic with suspicion: one art critic, speaking for other Parisians, perceived in it an alarming intimation of "the scaffolds of 1793."

  7. La Belle Strasbourgeoise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Belle_Strasbourgeoise

    La Belle Strasbourgeoise is the most famous of the circa 1,500 portrait paintings by Largillière, and arguably the most iconic work in the Strasbourg museum. The identity of the depicted woman is unknown: she may be someone from the Strasbourg bourgeoisie, or a young Parisian in disguise (Strasbourg had become part of France only 22 years prior, in 1681), or the painter's own sister, Marie ...

  8. Berthe Morisot with a Bouquet of Violets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berthe_Morisot_with_a...

    It depicts fellow painter Berthe Morisot dressed in black mourning dress, with a barely visible bouquet of violets. The painting, sometimes known as Portrait of Berthe Morisot, Berthe Morisot in a black hat or Young woman in a black hat, is in the collection of the Musée d'Orsay in Paris. Manet also created an etching and two lithographs of ...

  9. The Two Sisters (Chassériau) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Two_Sisters_(Chassériau)

    When The Two Sisters was exhibited in the Salon of 1843, the response of the critics and the public was mixed. One critic, Louis Peisse, wrote: M. Chassériau wanted, perhaps unnecessarily, to undertake a difficult thing, to do a painting with two figures of women, both full length, of the same height, both in dresses of the same color and the same fabric, with the same shawl, posed in the ...