Portrait de la seconde épouse de l'artiste

Henri Rousseau · PD

Portrait de la seconde épouse de l'artiste


Détails

Année
1900
Technique
huile sur toile
Type
peinture
Dimensions
23 × 19 cm

L'histoire

Henri Rousseau was a Paris customs clerk who taught himself to paint on Sundays and did not paint full time until he was nearly fifty. The critics laughed at his flat, plain pictures, but a younger crowd of artists saw something real in them, and it was they who kept his name alive. This small portrait is of Josephine, the widow he married in 1899 and who died only a few years later. He painted her at pocket size, frank and unshaded, as a companion to a little self-portrait of himself holding a lamp. The pair passed to the painter Robert Delaunay, and then to Pablo Picasso, who admired Rousseau and in 1908 threw a famous party in his honour at his studio. It is through Picasso's own collection that this modest likeness now hangs in a museum bearing his name.

Explorez l'art comme ça partout, chez vous ou au musée. Bientôt.
Portrait de la seconde épouse de l'artiste — Henri Rousseau — MuseScope