TELL ME A STORY

TELL ME A STORY
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Monday, March 6, 2017

A GIRL WITH A WATERING CAN

Mary Marcia
America's STORYTELLER
Telling Untold Stories in Photographs, Prose and Public Speaking 





 Permalink:  http://tellmeastory-marcia.blogspot.com/2017/03/a-girl-with-watering-can.html 
 
I fell in love when I was 16 years old with Pierre-Auguste Renoir's painting,  A Girl With A Watering Can 
It was displayed at the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C.  when I saw it.  I purchased a postcard print of the painting.  I still treasure that postcard print 49 years later.   

The Impressionist painting, A Girl With A Watering Can, was painted by Renoir in 1876.  Renoir apparently painted it in Monet's famous garden at Argenteuil, France.

 
Argenteuil, France
CLICK on the link or COPY & PASTE a link in your browser:   
http://www.nga.gov/exhibitions/impr_intro.shtm 

 Map and Forecast
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http://www.weather-forecast.com/locations/Argenteuil
 
The girl wearing the blue dress holding the watering can is  Mademoiselle Leclere.  She is probably the daughter of one of the customers of Renoir's works, and most likely upper class.  

Mademoiselle Leclere must have posed for quite a long time for the portrait. The little girl is not looking directly at the audience, so although the picture was posed, it has a snapshot effect.

Rather than blend his colors,  Renoir  applied them in individual touches that dissolve edges that seem to shimmer with light.





National Gallery of Art
Washington, D.C.

image of A Girl with a Watering Can Auguste Renoir (artist)
French, 1841 - 1919
A Girl with a Watering Can, 1876
oil on canvas
overall: 100 x 73 cm (39 3/8 x 28 3/4 in.) framed: 125.7 x 97.5 x 6.9 cm (49 1/2 x 38 3/8 x 2 11/16 in.)
Chester Dale Collection
1963.10.206
On View
From the Tour: Mary Cassatt, Auguste Renoir

This painting has long been a favorite of visitors to the National Gallery of Art -- and it seems that Renoir painted it with exactly this hope, that it would please a large audience.

The first impressionist exhibition, in 1874, had brought Renoir and his fellow artists more notoriety than business, and the auction he optimistically organized for his own work the following year was a financial disaster. Unlike Cassatt, who had family wealth, Renoir, the son of a tailor, was in a constant struggle for money in his early career. He began to paint charming, light-filled scenes with women and children, like this one, in the hopes of increasing sales. He probably thought that the pretty child in her fancy dress might also attract portrait commissions.

Although it was landscape that had provided the first, and most important, inspiration for impressionism, Renoir's instinct always led him back to the figure.

The deep blue of the dress, the bright red of the bow and the girl's lips, and the cool greens of the lush garden behind her are all given a prismatic brilliance by Renoir's brushwork. Rather than blend his colors, Renoir has applied them in individual touches that dissolve edges and seem to shimmer with light.

Impressionism sought to capture the effect of light on the senses, communicating a visual signal with each stroke of the brush.

CLICK on the link or COPY & PASTE a link in your browser: 
http://www.nga.gov/collection/gallery/gg83/gg83-46681.html
  

From Wikipedia
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Girl_with_a_Watering_Can

A Girl with a Watering Can
Auguste Renoir - A Girl with a Watering Can - Google Art Project.jpg
Artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Year 1876
A Girl with a Watering Can is an Impressionist painting by Pierre-Auguste Renoir from 1876. The work was apparently painted in Monet's famous garden at Argenteuil. This painting is of Mademoiselle Leclere in her blue dress holding a watering can


 COLOR YOUR OWN VERSION OF THE PAINTING

Color your own version of A Girl With A Watering Can.
 Visit Monet's Garden
CLICK on the link or COPY & PASTE a link in your browser:  
http://giverny.org/gardens/fcm/visitgb.htm 
 Approximately 500 000 visitors discover Monet's gardens each year during the seven months that it is open.   

The Two Gardens
There are two parts in Monet's garden: 
a flower garden called Clos Normand in front of the house 
and a Japanese inspired water garden on the other side of the road. 
The two parts of Monet's garden contrast and complement one another.
Someday I will see  A Girl With A Watering Can again.
 
Someday I will visit Monet's Garden.
How about you?
What's your favorite painting? 

 Where do you dream of visiting? 

I wonder.
Did Pierre Auguste Renoir have a daughter?

Renoir's official biography states that Renoir and his wife, Aline, had three sons. 




"In 1890 he married Aline Victorine Charigot, who, along with a number of the artist's friends, had already served as a model for Les Déjeuner des canotiers (Luncheon of the Boating Party, 1881), and with whom he had already had a child, Pierre, in 1885. After his marriage Renoir painted many scenes of his wife and daily family life, including their children and their nurse, Aline's cousin Gabrielle Renard. The Renoirs had three sons, one of whom, Jean, became a filmmaker of note and another, Pierre, became a stage and film actor."

CLICK on the link or COPY & PASTE the link in your browser:
http://www.pierre-auguste-renoir.org/biography.html




 Did Pierre Auguste Renoir have a daughter?

I wonder because the little girl in my favorite painting, A Girl With A Watering Can, looks a lot like the little girl in Renoir's Little Girl With a Spray of Flowers, and a lot like the little girl in The Umbrellas.

Here's an interesting post about The Umbrellas from a woman named Patricia McGoldrick.  Patricia thinks a shop girl is the focus of the painting, who catches the attention of the man behind her in the painting (maybe Renoir himself), and then the man looks away.

 Patricia McGoldrick wrote about a shop girl in The Umbrellas:
"Yet she is the beauty and the main focus of the painting. 
She has just caught the attention of the man immediately behind her, 
who may be Renoir himself, 
the likeness is not dissimilar, 
and looks away modestly from his gaze. " 


I wonder.

My eye is drawn to the little girl in the painting, The Umbrellas. She is looking directly at me...at the audience.  It appears to me that the man (Renoir?) is glancing at the little girl.

See for yourself.

 
A Girl With A Watering Can by Pierre Auguste Renoir

 The Umbrellas

(Les Parapluies)

1883

www.pierre-auguste-renoir.org

  



The Umbrellas

(Les Parapluies)

1883

Information about painting

Dimensions:
115 x 180 cm
Type:
Oil on canvas

When I was a child (over forty years ago), this painting used to hang in the Hugh Lane Gallery, Dublin, and my mother used to take me to see it.

She told me that the main figure was a milliner’s assistant, carrying a milliner’s basket, who was probably out on an errand delivering a hat to a wealthy customer. The basket is closed with a black lacquered lid, to protect the hat, and the girl’s hand is reflected in the shiny black of its lacquered cover.

While all the other figures in the painting wear hats, the assistant, a mere shop-girl, wears none, nor does she carry an umbrella to protect her from the rain. Her dress is drab and unadorned in dramatic contrast with the elegant finery of the other figures, who all clearly come from a much higher social strata.

Yet she is the beauty and the main focus of the painting. She has just caught the attention of the man immediately behind her, who may be Renoir himself, the likeness is not dissimilar, and looks away modestly from his gaze.

In the painting, Renoir captures the moment, by putting us, the viewer, right in the middle of the scene, focusing our attention on the girl with the downward sweep of the opened and half opened umbrellas.

This account has always framed my understanding of the picture and made it live for me as one of my favorite paintings.

Patricia McGoldrick
Posted by Patricia McGoldrick on 05. February 2012. at 10:00

The Umbrellas

(Les Parapluies)

1883

Information about painting

Dimensions:
115 x 180 cm
Type:
Oil on canvas

 
I wonder.

Did Pierre Auguste Renoir have a daughter?

Someone sometime  identified the girl wearing wearing the blue dress holding the watering can in Renoir's painting as Mademoiselle Leclere, and surmised that she was probably the daughter of one of Renoir's customers. 

Is the same little girl, Mademoiselle Leclere,  in Renoir's other paintings?   

Was  Mademoiselle Leclere Renoir's own daughter?   

I heard stories were told about Renoir having a daughter.  Some stories say she died at a young age.  Some stories say she lived near Paris, visiting the places her father, Renoir, painted.

Maybe someday I'll visit France, and hear the stories myself.

I wonder what secrets are waiting to be discovered in people's memories, in old letters and postcards, and inscriptions on the backs of paintings?

I wonder.

Did Pierre Auguste Renoir have a daughter?

What do you think?

  

LITTLE GIRL 
WITH A SPRAY OF FLOWERS

  
www.pierre-auguste-renoir.org

 Pierre Auguste Renoir
The Complete Works 
CLICK on the link or COPY & PASTE the link in your browser:
 http://www.pierre-auguste-renoir.org/Little-Girl-With-A-Spray-Of-Flowers.html

 



Did Pierre Auguste Renoir have a daughter?

I wonder.

Thanks for stopping by!

Come back often, and invite a friend! 

Louise at Artsy invited me to include a link on this blog
to Artsy's page on Pierre-Auguste Renoir.  
 
Their Pierre-Auguste Renoir page provides visitors with Renoir's bio, over 140 of his works, exclusive articles, 
and up-to-date Renoir exhibition listings. 
The page also includes related artists and categories, 
allowing viewers to discover art beyond Artsy's Renoir page. 

CLICK on the link or COPY & PASTE the link in your browser:
 LINK:  https://www.artsy.net/artist/pierre-auguste-renoir

  
 

Marcia Norwood
America's STORYTELLER


Telling Untold Stories 
in Photographs, Prose and Public Speaking 



CLICK on the link or COPY & PASTE the link in your browser:
http://images.search.yahoo.com/search/images;_ylt=A0LEVxoNHKRTFWQAMqBXNyoA?p=renoir+paintings+images&fr=mcafee&fr2=piv-web



Marcia (2 years old).  Copyright 1951 Marcia Norwood



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