Portrait of Marguerite de Conflans

Painting by Édouard Manet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Portrait of Marguerite de Conflans is a c.1876 oval oil on canvas portrait by the French painter Édouard Manet. It is owned by the Musée d’Orsay, though it is on display in the red salon at the Musée des Augustins in Toulouse.[1] Like A Bar at the Folies-Bergère, the work mimics Ingres in its use of a mirror to show the figure from several angles, a motif rarely used by Manet.

Yearc. 1876
Mediumoil on canvas
Dimensions53 cm × 64 cm (21 in × 25 in)
Quick facts Marguerite de Conflans, Artist ...
Marguerite de Conflans
Manet Marguerite de Conflans (D 1986 1)
ArtistÉdouard Manet
Yearc. 1876
Mediumoil on canvas
Dimensions53 cm × 64 cm (21 in × 25 in)
LocationMusée des Augustins, Toulouse
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It is one of Manet's five portraits of Marguerite de Conflans, the earliest dating to 1873.[2] He asked her to sit again and again, meeting her at receptions organised by his wife, to which de Conflans came with her mother.[3]

It was first owned by Madamoiselle d'Angély, the subject's daughter, who left it to the Louvre in 1941. It entered that museum's collection officially in 1945. It was later assigned to the musée d'Orsay when that museum opened in 1986[4] - later the same year it was exchanged for Isidore Pils's The Death of a Sister of Charity from the Musée des Augustins. It was restored in 2005, enabling structural analysis of the canvas - the edges were worn but the canvas was still supple. The wooden frame seems not to be the original.[5]

See also

References

Bibliography (in French)

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