Women in the fine arts, from the Seventh Century B.C. to the Twentieth Century A.D. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 412 pages of information about Women in the fine arts, from the Seventh Century B.C. to the Twentieth Century A.D..

Women in the fine arts, from the Seventh Century B.C. to the Twentieth Century A.D. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 412 pages of information about Women in the fine arts, from the Seventh Century B.C. to the Twentieth Century A.D..

She painted portraits of many eminent people, and was esteemed as a friend by men and women of culture and high position.  The friendship between the artist and Marie Antoinette was a sincere and deep affection between two women, neither of whom remembered that one of them was a queen.  It was a great advantage to the artist to be thus intimately associated with her sovereign lady.  Even in the great state picture of the Queen surrounded by her children, at Versailles, one realizes the tenderness of the painter as she lovingly reproduced her friend.

Marie Antoinette desired that Mme. Le Brun should be elected to the Academy; Vernet approved it, and an unusual honor was shown her in being made an Academician before the completion of her reception picture.  At that time it was a great advantage to be a member of the Academy, as no other artists were permitted to exhibit their works in the Salon of the Beaux-Arts.

Mme. Le Brun had one habit with which she allowed nothing to interfere, which was taking a rest after her work for the day was done.  She called it her “calm,” and to it she attributed a large share of her power of endurance, although it lost her many pleasures.  She could not go out to dinner or entertain at that hour.  The evening was her only time for social pleasures.  But when one reads her “Souvenirs,” and realizes how many notable people she met in her studio and in evening society, it scarcely seems necessary to regret that she could not dine out!

Mme. Le Brun was at one period thought to be very extravagant, and one of her entertainments caused endless comments.  Her own account of it shows how greatly the cost was exaggerated.  She writes that on one occasion she invited twelve or fifteen friends to listen to her brother’s reading during her “calm.”  The poem read was the “Voyage du jeune Anacharsis en Grece,” in which a dinner was described, and even the receipts for making various sauces were given.  The artist was seized with the idea of improvising a Greek supper.

She summoned her cook and instructed her in what had been read.  Among her guests were several unusually pretty ladies, who attired themselves in Greek costumes as nearly as the time permitted.  Mme. Le Brun retained the white blouse she wore at her work, adding a veil and a crown of flowers.  Her studio was rich in antique objects, and a dealer whom she knew loaned her cups, vases, and lamps.  All was arranged with the effect an artist knows how to produce.

As the guests arrived Mme. Le Brun added here and there an element of Grecian costume until their number was sufficient for an effective tableau vivant.  Her daughter and a little friend were dressed as pages and bore antique vases.  A canopy hung over the table, the guests were posed in picturesque attitudes, and those who arrived later were arrested at the door of the supper-room with surprise and delight.

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Women in the fine arts, from the Seventh Century B.C. to the Twentieth Century A.D. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.