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A Girl with a Watering Can is an 1876 Impressionist oil painting on canvas by Pierre-Auguste Renoir. The work was apparently painted in Claude Monet's famous garden at Argenteuil, and may portray one of the girls in Renoir's neighborhood in a blue dress holding a watering can. [1] The painting is in the National Gallery of Art, in Washington, D.C..
The dress which is extremely well painted, is a heavenly blue." [1] In 1898, while the painting was in the collection of Henri Rouart, artist Paul Signac described the La Parisienne as: "a large painting of a woman in blue painted by Renoir in 1874. The dress is blue, a pure intense blue.
Young Woman with a Blue Ribbon (French: Jeune fille au ruban bleu) 1888: 55 cm × 46 cm (22 in × 18 in) Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon, France Girl with Spikes (French: Fille aux oreilles) 1888: 65 cm × 54 cm (26 in × 21 in) São Paulo Museum of Art, São Paulo, Brazil [37] A Young Girl with Daisies (French: Une jeune fille avec des marguerites ...
The younger daughters Alice and Elizabeth would become the subject of a later painting by Renoir, now commonly known as Pink and Blue. The Portrait of Irène Cahen d'Anvers, also commonly called Little Irene, is considered today as one of Renoir's masterpieces. At the time, for an unknown reason, Louis was so dissatisfied with the painting that ...
Young Woman with a Blue Ribbon is an 1888 oil on canvas painting by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, now in the Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon.The name of the model is unknown but she can also be seen in other Renoir works such as the young woman splashing the others in Les Grandes Baigneuses (Renoir, 1887).
Renoir depicts two young girls at a piano in a bourgeois home, one in a white dress with blue sash seated playing and one in a pink dress standing. Renoir completed three additional versions of this composition in oil for collectors; the Luxembourg version is now housed at the Musée d'Orsay in Paris, [2] the Robert Lehman Collection version is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, [3 ...
Alice and Elisabeth Cahen d’Anvers (most commonly referred to as Pink and Blue) is an oil painting by French impressionist Pierre-Auguste Renoir.Produced in Paris in 1881, the painting depicts the sisters Alice and Elisabeth, daughters of Louise Cahen d'Anvers and her husband the Jewish banker Louis Raphaël Cahen d'Anvers.
Jeanne listens passively to the man in front of her while a young neighborhood girl in her everyday dress gazes up at the interaction. [3] Renoir noted to his friend Georges Rivière that the girl had been watching him while he worked. Unbeknownst to the girl, Renoir included her in his final painting. [4]: 73