Morisot was born in Bourges, France, into an affluent bourgeois family. Her father, Edmé Tiburce Morisot, was the prefect of the department of Cher. He also studied architecture at École des Beaux Arts. Her mother, Marie-Joséphine-Cornélie Thomas, was the great-niece of Jean-Honoré Fragonard, one of the most prolific Rococo painters of the ancien régime. She… Continue reading Berthe Morisot’s Early Life and Education
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Berthe Morisot, Woman Impressionist
Janelle Montgomery: Morisot was a respected member of a cohort of painters we know as “the Impressionists,” and yet her work is very rarely studied, or even exhibited even today. How did you go about choosing the works for this show and organizing them into the exhibition, and what does it tell us not only… Continue reading Berthe Morisot, Woman Impressionist
Morisot’s Importance in the Impressionist Movement
Berthe Morisot, “Woman Impressionist,” Emerges from the Margins. Morisot is a visual poet of womanhood like perhaps no other painter before or since, with a comprehension of female experience that is at least equal in force to the combined delectations of women by her male peers. Peter Schjeldahl
“Le féminisme en art”: Berthe Morisot
Inventing Impressionism
Art historian Jacky Klein explores the story of this gifted female Impressionist painter in this video from ArtFundUK.
Berthe’s daughter, Julie Manet
Throughout her lifetime, Berthe created many paintings of her daughter, Julie Manet. She painted Julie during many periods of her daughter’s life, up until Marisot’s death in 1895.
Paintings of Julie sometimes caught her in the act of playing as a child, portraits, and even a painting of her playing violin.
Julie herself grew up to be a painter, model, diarist, and art collector.