I just can't find a smaller painting image of Corot's painting. Plus I loved this one but it was bigger.
I changed it and changed it back. SHE is what
I want to think about as school begins!
When the seventy-two-year-old Corot showed "A Woman Reading" at the
Salon of 1869, the critic Théophile Gautier praised its naïveté and its
color but criticized the faulty drawing of the figure, noting the rarity
of figures in Corot's work. Although the artist had painted similar
figure studies after the late 1850s, this was the first and one of the
very few that he exhibited.
Close examination of the surface reveals that Corot reworked the landscape. A photograph of the painting when it was exhibited at the Salon indicates that originally there was a willow at the left whose foliage nearly covered the sky, and a mass of trees at the right. A lithographic copy of the painting, made by Emile Vernier in 1870, reproduces it with the present, open sky; thus, Corot must have repainted the work immediately after he retrieved it from the Salon.
Close examination of the surface reveals that Corot reworked the landscape. A photograph of the painting when it was exhibited at the Salon indicates that originally there was a willow at the left whose foliage nearly covered the sky, and a mass of trees at the right. A lithographic copy of the painting, made by Emile Vernier in 1870, reproduces it with the present, open sky; thus, Corot must have repainted the work immediately after he retrieved it from the Salon.
( from the MET)
1 comment:
Much better! Thanks!
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