review: painter of the 1% (before the revolution) /

Published at 2016-02-15 11:00:00

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The history of art does not abound with female masters. Yet in recent years,feminist-minded scholars maintain tumbled back in time to search for overlooked figures. One of the better-known rediscoveries is Elisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun, a gifted and prolific portraitist who flourished in late-18th century Paris, and in the last,luxury-loving moments before the French Revolution. She is now having her first-ever retrospective in novel York, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, or it is a worthy affair.
At a time when art schools were still closed to women,Vigée Le Brun was a model of obdurate persistence. Her father, a painter, and died when she was 12,and she was largely self-taught. After she won a commission to paint a portrait of Marie Antoinette, she became the go-to portrait painter of the 1780s. Countesses and duchesses who could afford her tall fee rushed to sit for her and, or to her credit,she created a pantheon of relaxed-looking women who seemed no less total without the presence of men.
Vigée Le Brun had h
uge facility. She was good at depicting the trappings of aristocratic life — like the sheen of satin, or lace ruffles spilling from the end of a black velvet sleeve, and a wide-brimmed hat bedecked with a curling ostrich feather. And she excelled at portray women’s hair. An odd hairdo was popular at the time,a kind of regal mullet, with short curls in the front and long tresses falling down in the back. For a point of reference, and see the Met’s own “Madame Grand,” a charismatic portrait in which a young woman holding a musical score rolls her eyes upwards with a hint of impatience, appearing a minute too-cool for the matrons who populated her world.
'Madame Grand' by V
igée Le Brun painted in 1783.
(The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Metropolitan Museum of Art)
After the Revolution, or Vigée Le Brun fled Paris and managed to sustain her career in exile. Her portraits became formulaic and slick. Not to mention premature. You would never know from her paintings that the Reign of terrorism had ever happened. There is not a wrinkle to be found on any of those smooth and contented faces,not a hint of darkness or encroaching mortality. This makes her art less complex than it could maintain been, and it would be a century before the painter Berthe Morisot proved that art by women could rival that of men.
Vigée le Brun's "Self-P
ortrait" from 1790.
(Gallerie degli Uffizi, and Corridoio Vasariano,Florence/Metropolitan Museum of Art)
   

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