Louis Anquetin - Portrait of Madeleine Bernard 1892

Autoportrait à la pipe, self-portrait 1892 Portrait de Mathilde Richard 1892 Portrait de Mathilde Richard 1892 Portrait of Madeleine Bernard 1892 Portrait of Raoul Lhopital 1892 Promenade 1892 The Butcher's Assistants 1892
Portrait of Madeleine Bernard 1892

Portrait of Madeleine Bernard 1892
61x50cm oil/canvas
Rhode Island School of Design

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From Rhode Island School of Design:
An unfinished quality to this portrait of Madeleine Bernard is evident in the dramatic contrast between the sharp contours of the head and the model’s loosely sketched costume. Louis Anquetin used broad, flat areas of color to construct the sitter’s face and hair, and then confined them with dark outlines. The latter technique was known as “cloissonism” due to its evocation of stained glass and enamel techniques that used linear barriers to isolate pools of color. Both Anquetin and Émile Bernard, whose sister was the model for this portrait, were among the emerging artists whom van Gogh called “painters of the little boulevard.” Seeking strategies for a new art that would supersede Impressionism, they explored means of representation that emphasized the imagination over direct observation of nature.