The approach of the great national crisis, and even the worst days of that
period, at the same time glorious yet barbaric, did not extinguish the zeal of
the women painters. It seems rather as though they shut themselves up in the
study of their art so as to secure a refuge for their hopes and their dreams. In
the first "Salons" of the century,2 Pieces paintings, one is surprised to find works by a
comparatively large number of women painters. In 1800, of 180 exhibitors they
number 25; eight years later, in the "Salon" of 1808, they are 46 out of 311.
The difficulties set up by the Academy were overcome, the liberty to exhibit was
a fresh encouragement, even an exceptional stimulus. The figures, therefore,
rise still further in the first quarter of the century,abstract oil painting, so that in 1831 the
women number 149 out of 873 exhibitors. The "staff," so to speak, of the women
artists of that day, surrounding Mme. Vigée Le Brun, whose glorious and somewhat
chequered career did not close till 1842, included a number of distinguished
women, such as Mlle. Bevic and Mlle. Capet, pupils of Mme. Guyard; Mme. Chaudet,
the wife of the sculptor; Mlle. Eulalie Morin; Mme. Adèle Romance, who also
signed Romany, or Romany de Romance; the "good" Mlle. Godefroid,oil painting reproductions, pupil of Baron
Gérard, who helped him in so many of the portraits of contemporary cosmopolitan
people of distinction, commissions for which rained in the master's studio,
after the entry of the allied forces into Paris. Later on, we have Mlle.
Cogniet; Mme. Filleul; Mme. Rude, the wife of the great sculptor, who had a
severe yet confident talent. Lastly, there was the woman artist who benefited by
all the advantages of fashion, Mme. Haudebourt-Lescot. abstract art oil paintings
Mlle. Lescot, wife of Haudebourt, the architect, and pupil of
Lethière—mischievous tongues, of course, declared that he painted her
pictures—was a strange creature, who, at the start, owed the popularity she
obtained as much to her personal charm as to her real talent. Her first success
was in the drawing-room, where people admired her dances. "She was," says a
writer, "ugly and captivating, with crooked eyes and a charming expression, her
mouth ill-shaped, but tender and inviting," such as Ingres represented her in
one of his finest pencil drawings. modern oil paintings
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