When institutional acclaim plucked French impressionist Berthe Morisot from relative obscurity six years ago, the tradition of situating her in relation to famed male colleagues like Renoir and Degas ...
On “Berthe Morisot and the Art of the Eighteenth Century” at Musée Marmottan Monet. The exhibition, a joint effort with London’s Dulwich Picture Gallery, is a double attraction. In addition to ...
The “Manet & Morisot” exhibition at the Legion of Honor is more than paintings. It’s actually three very moving and timeless stories painted on canvas, two of them mildly scandalous.
San Francisco’s Legion of Honor stages a superb exhibition that reveals the ways in which the two French painters influenced each other over decades in the late 19th century.
From left, “The Cradle” by Berthe Morisot, “The Mother and Sister of the Artist” by Berthe Morisot, “The Luncheon” by Claude Monet, “The Artist's Daughter, Marie-Anne Carolus-Duran” by Charles Emile ...
Berthe Morisot was at times a leading light to the more established Édouard Manet, who seemingly even filled the gaps in one ...
Impressionism started out 151 years ago out as a rebellious movement, derided by critics, but it’s box office gold these days, and museums worldwide celebrated its sesquicentennial with major ...
Mary Cassatt, “Summertime,” 1894. Oil on canvas. A view of the “Mary Cassatt / Berthe Morisot, Allies in Impressionism” installation at the Fenimore Museum in Cooperstown. The exhibit runs through ...