Description
In 1882 Fernand Lungren traveled to Paris, where he briefly attended classes at the Académie Julian before abandoning formal training in favor of direct observation of the city and its people. Here, a fashionably dressed woman sits alone and alert. Her presence is a sign of modern Paris’s changing social environment, in which café culture offered women new opportunities for leisure in public spaces. Although Lungren employed a dense, hard-edged style, his interest in modern life and the effects of light (here both gas and electric lighting) was nevertheless indebted to French Impressionism.
Provenance
Lester Field (born Lester Rosenfield, 1886–1937) and Louis Ritman (1889–1963), Chicago and Paris, by 1937; sold to Albert Milch, Milch Gallery, New York, 1937 [according to letter from son Harold C. Milch, dated November 5, 1979, copy in curatorial object file]; sold to Charles H. Worcester (1864–1956), 1945; given to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1947.
Accession Number
59908
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
79.7 × 104.8 cm (31 3/8 × 41 1/4 in.)
Classification
painting
Credit Line
Charles H. and Mary F. S. Worcester Collection