Mademoiselle de Foudras

Image credit: Glasgow Life Museums

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Notes

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This is one of the most haunting half-length, life-size, figural studies that Corot painted. The young woman wears a Greek 'kavadi' and embroidered waistcoat over her black street clothes. She is posed against the painted dado of Corot's studio. He has taken great care to capture her facial characteristics – particularly her dark, deep-set eyes and her demure gaze.

According to Corot's biographer, Mlle de Foudras was the daughter of a tobacconist who kept a shop at the Rue Lafayette, near the Faubourg Poissonière, Paris. This painting, however, cannot really be considered a portrait because the clothes and the setting are not hers – they belong to the artist.

The tinge of melancholy in her distant expression, the chain of wild flowers enlivening her dark hair, even her pose and costume are reminiscent of works by Leonardo, and it has been suggested that Corot, who loved to visit the works of the Old Masters in the Louvre, was deliberately testing his own skills against those of Leonardo and Rembrandt.
Title

Mademoiselle de Foudras

Date

1872

Medium

oil on canvas

Measurements

H 89 x W 59.7 cm

Accession number

2858

Acquisition method

presented by the Trustees of the estate of D. W. T. Cargill, 1950

Work type

Painting

Inscription description

signed/dated

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Normally on display at

Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum

Argyle Street, Glasgow G3 8AG Scotland

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