Berthe Morisot (born January 14, 1841, Bourges, France—died March 2, 1895, Paris) was a French painter and printmaker who exhibited regularly with the Impressionists and, despite the protests of friends and family, continued to participate in their struggle for recognition.
The daughter of a high government official (and a granddaughter of the important Rococo painter Jean-Honoré Fragonard), Morisot decided early to be an artist and pursued her goal with seriousness and dedication. From 1862 to 1868 she worked under the guidance of Camille Corot. She first exhibited paintings at the Salon in 1864. Her work was exhibited there regularly through 1874, when she vowed never to show her paintings in the officially sanctioned forum again. In 1868 she met Édouard Manet, with whom she developed a working friendship. He did several portraits of her (e.g., Repose, c. 1870). Manet had a liberating effect on her work, and she in turn aroused his interest in outdoor painting. In 1874 she married Manet’s younger brother, Eugène, a writer and painter.
(Explore the eight Impressionist exhibitions.)
Morisot’s insistence on design aligns her work closer to Manet’s than to that of her fellow Impressionists, whose interests in color-optical experimentation she never assumed. Her paintings frequently depicted private moments (e.g., Woman at Her Toilette, 1875/80) and included members of her family, particularly her sister, Edma (e.g., Reading, 1873; and The Artist’s Sister Edma and Their Mother, 1870). Delicate and subtle, exquisite in color—often with a subdued emerald glow—they won her the admiration of her Impressionist colleagues. Like that of the other Impressionists, her work was ridiculed by many critics. Never commercially successful during her lifetime, she nevertheless outsold Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, and Alfred Sisley. She was a woman of great culture and charm and counted among her close friends Stéphane Mallarmé, Edgar Degas, Charles Baudelaire, Émile Zola, Emmanuel Chabrier, Renoir, and Monet.