The first woman to join the circle of the French impressionist painters,
Berthe Morisot,
b. Jan. 14, 1841, d. Mar. 2, 1895, exhibited in all but one
of their shows.
Born into a family of wealth and culture, Morisot received the
conventional lessons in drawing and painting. She went firmly against
convention, however, in choosing to take these pursuits seriously and make
them her life's work. Having studied for a time under Camille Corot, she
later began her long friendship with
Edouard Manet, who became her
brother-in-law in 1874 and was the most important single influence on the
development of her style. Unlike most of the other impressionists, who were
then intensely engaged in optical experiments with color, Morisot and Manet
agreed on a more conservative approach, confining their use of color to a
naturalistic framework. Morisot, however, did encourage Manet to adopt the
impressionists high-keyed palette and to abandon the use of black. Her own
carefully composed, brightly hued canvases are often studies of women,
either out-of-doors or in domestic settings. Morisot and American artist
Mary Cassatt
are generally considered the most important women painters of
the later 19th century.