A detailed and highly personal account of the life and works of Berthe
Morisot, the most influential female impressionist painter.
Berthe Morisot won over the impressionists with her talent and became
the first woman of the group alongside Monet, Degas, and Renoir. She was
the foremost female painter of the impressionist movement and, to quote
Apollinaire, "one of the most complete artists of her day."
Underestimated for more than a century, today her works demonstrate how
visionary she was, pioneering a new style of painting.
Including correspondence with key members of the impressionist movement,
this book focuses on the most important stages of Morisot's career: her
precocious artistic talent as a child, her participation at age
twenty-three in the Salon de Paris of 1864, her marriage in 1874 to
Eugène Manet and the birth of their daughter, Julie--a frequent subject
in Morisot's paintings--and the expressive freedom of her later works.
This intimate portrait of the artist and her work is an essential
reference on the impressionists.