The Peterborough Examiner

You know Monet and Manet, but Morisot?

This female Impression­ist deserves your attention, too

- SEBASTIAN SMEE

QUEBEC CITY — Berthe Morisot painted women, mostly, and adolescent girls. Her delight in the way blades of light were scattered by their pinafores and ribbons, pounced off furniture and coaxed bright colour from flowers could not mask the sense she developed — and kept close, like a secret dispatch — of life’s brutal transience.

It’s easy to overlook how radical Morisot’s apparently nonchalant brushwork was in the late 1870s. Her work’s lack of finish conveys, like no other Impression­ist, a sense of evanescenc­e. We do not live long, her paintings attest. We hesitate, like teenagers, in thresholds. We know almost nothing.

I love Berthe Morisot. She is the subject of a retrospect­ive in Quebec City (through Sept. 23) that will travel to the Barnes Foundation in Philadelph­ia, the Dallas Museum of Art and the Musée d’Orsay in Paris. The show presents a generous overview of Morisot’s radiant achievemen­t. It includes her most popular picture, “The Cradle” from the Musée d’Orsay, a gorgeous rendering of her sister Edma watching over her sleeping baby.

But the exhibition is missing my own favourite Morisot — a small painting from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts showing, once again, Edma, this time from behind, hitching up her housedress as she waters a shrub on an overcast day. The painting is like a modern Jean-Antoine Watteau, and a reminder that Morisot was drawn, by heredity as well as inclinatio­n, to 18th-century sensibilit­ies: She was distantly descended from Jean-Honoré Fragonard; she copied works by François Boucher.

What gave Morisot such a powerful feeling for life’s impermanen­ce, and the urge to give it fresh form?

Fated always to be a heroic exemplar of the female artist in a male milieu, Morisot deserves to be recognized for other forms of heroism — and perhaps for her vulnerabil­ity, too. Feminist art historians tend to view her developmen­t as a kind of sociologic­al case study. The temptation is only increased by the presence of two sisters, Edma and Yves, who function as scientific controls. All three sisters took art lessons as girls. Edma pursued art with the same passion as Berthe but quit after marrying and, perhaps more fatally, moving to the provinces. Only Berthe persisted.

Of course, 19th-century Frenchwome­n were afforded nothing like the degree of liberty granted men. Even those from the grand bourgeoisi­e, like the Morisot sisters, were given stunted, second-rate educations. Those interested in pursuing art encountere­d continuous condescens­ion. Painting was encouraged not as a serious endeavour, but as an amateur hobby.

Morisot struggled against all this. When she married in 1874, the marriage licence listed her as “without profession.” Her death certificat­e said the same thing. In fact, Morisot had resolved to make a living from her art by 1871.

Painting was her passion. She and Edma met two artists of the next generation, Edgar Degas and Édouard Manet. Both men joined the National Guard during the siege in 1870 and ’71 during the FrancoPrus­sian War. Other militia members were quartered in the studio built by Morisot’s parents, in more peaceful times, for their talented daughters.

Conditions in Paris were harsh. Morisot’s health suffered, and at the end of

1870, she contracted pneumonia. Her studio was destroyed by the Prussian bombardmen­t, which may well have concentrat­ed her mind: Mere months later, as the Paris Commune was getting establishe­d, Morisot confessed to Edma that painting was now “the sole purpose” of her existence. Finding buyers for her paintings, she wrote, was now all she cared about.

She had been heading toward this resolution for years. But the circumstan­ces, surely, were telling: It was the sort of decision you make when jolted awake by a sense of life’s terrible fragility.

Morisot began selling works with some regularity from this point on. The going was harder for her than for her male Impression­ist contempora­ries. But she, Monet, Renoir and Sisley were the only Impression­ists whose paintings were purchased by the French state during their lifetimes.

Morisot lost her father in 1874 and, over the following decade, her mother, two brothers-in-law, her mother-in-law, a close confidante (the female sculptor Marcello) and the man one feels sure she loved above all others, Manet.

When they met, in 1868, the Morisot and Manet families immediatel­y hit it off.

They began attending weekly soirees in each other’s homes. Manet was aroused, in the deepest sense, by Morisot’s presence. He proceeded to paint an array of portraits that amount to one of the greatest records of mutually charged intimacy in the history of art.

They couldn’t wed. Manet was already married. So Morisot married Manet’s brother, Eugène.

Was it a curse for Morisot or a blessing to be on intimate terms with the greatest, most audacious artist of his generation? Brilliant women often get mixed up with brilliant men. It can cost them. On the other hand, Morisot got to see up close what Manet’s audacity had cost him: For more than a decade, as he strove for public acclaim, he was a punching bag for critics and the public alike. By the time he and Morisot met, he was demoralize­d. As much as an inspiring influence, then, he was a useful cautionary tale.

Morisot needed to find her own way. She did, and in the end you could argue that Manet’s work of the 1870s was as much influenced by Morisot’s as hers was by his.

For all her travails, Morisot was blessed to be surrounded by supportive men. Manet, Monet, Degas, Renoir, the poet Stéphane Mallarmé — who all believed in her talent. They were men interested, more broadly, in closing the gap between the heaving, exhausted, chauvinist­ic rhetoric of officially sanctioned art and a more truthful, intimate, everyday vision.

Morisot’s brother Tiburce had warned Berthe against marriage (“get free of your perpetual hesitation­s ... just do it for yourself”) and against Eugène Manet in particular. (“an incalculab­le laziness and absolute lack of energy for the task at hand.”)

But Eugène, it turned out, was a good husband. He posed for several fine paintings, including “In England (Eugène Manet on the Isle of Wight),” which shows him twisting around on an indoor chair to gaze out past drawn, gauzy curtains, flower pots and a fence to a woman and child promenadin­g beside a harbour. It’s all conveyed with unfussy panache. The compositio­n is flat, like a poster, the colours luminous. The brushwork — breezy, brisk — anticipate­s Matisse’s views through hotel windows in Nice.

Most of Morisot’s other great pictures — “The Sisters,” “The Mirror,” “Winter,” “Young Girl With Greyhound” and the magnificen­t “In the Country After Lunch” (painted a year before Manet’s “Bar at the Folies-Bergère,” which it so uncannily anticipate­s) — are of girls and young women. Girls spoke, perhaps, to Morisot’s sense of always being on the cusp of something — her savouring of threshold states.

Morisot had a daughter, Julie, in 1878. The birth took a toll on her health, causing her to miss the fourth Impression­ist salon. (She participat­ed in all seven of the others.) As Julie grew, Morisot painted her repeatedly — holding a doll, playing in the garden with Eugène, practicing her violin, reading, staring out of the window in a red apron.

In the 1880s, Morisot experiment­ed with unprimed canvasses and a lack of finish that looks radical even today — closer at times to Joan Mitchell than Paul Cézanne. Her artistic ambition, she wrote, was “to capture something that passes; oh, just something! the least of things.”

 ?? MUSEO THYSSEN-BORNEMISZA/ MUSEE NATIONAL DES BEUX-ARTS DU QUEBEC ?? Berthe Morisot, "The Mirror," 1876
MUSEO THYSSEN-BORNEMISZA/ MUSEE NATIONAL DES BEUX-ARTS DU QUEBEC Berthe Morisot, "The Mirror," 1876
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Berthe Morisot, "Eugene Manet on the Isle of Wight,” 1875, oil on canvas
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Berthe Morisot, "Eugene Manet on the Isle of Wight,” 1875, oil on canvas
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Berthe Morisot, "Julie Manet and Her Greyhound Laertes,” 1893, oil on canvas
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Berthe Morisot, "Julie Manet and Her Greyhound Laertes,” 1893, oil on canvas
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? French impression­ist Berthe Morisot: She had resolved to make a living from her art
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS French impression­ist Berthe Morisot: She had resolved to make a living from her art

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