Monday, December 19, 2022

Artist of the Day, December 19, 2022: Marie Bashkirtseff, an Ukrainian-born, French Painter (#1729)

 Marie Bashkirtseff (born Maria Konstantinovna Bashkirtseva), (1858–1884) was an Ukrainian artist. She lived and worked in Paris, and died at the age of 25.

Bashkirtseff was born near Poltava, Russian Empire (now Ukraine) to a wealthy noble family. Her father was a local Marshal of Nobility Konstantin Pavlovich Bashkitsev. Her mother Maria Stepanovna Babanina (1833—1920) also belonged to Russian nobles. Her parents separated when she was 12. As a result, she grew up mostly abroad, traveling with her mother throughout most of Europe, with longer spells in Germany and on the Riviera, until the family settled in Paris. Educated privately and with early musical talent, she lost her chance at a career as a singer when illness destroyed her voice. She then determined to become an artist, and she studied painting in France at the Robert-Fleury studio and at the Académie Julian.

The Académie, as one of the few establishments that accepted female students, attracted young women from all over Europe and the United States. Fellow students at the Académie included Anna Bilińska-Bohdanowiczowa and especially Louise Breslau, whom Bashkirtseff viewed as her only real rival. Bashkirtseff would go on to produce a remarkable, if fairly conventional, body of work in her short lifetime, exhibiting at the Paris Salon as early as 1880 and every year thereafter until her death (except 1883). In 1884, she exhibited a portrait of Paris slum children entitled The Meeting and a pastel portrait of her cousin, for which she received an honorable mention.

Bashkirtseff's best-known works are The Meeting (now in the Musée d'Orsay, Paris) and her 1881 In the Studio, a portrait of her fellow artists at work. Although a large number of Bashkirtseff's works were destroyed by the Nazis during World War II, at least 60 survive. In 2000, a U.S. touring exhibition entitled "Overcoming All the Obstacles: The Women of Academy Julian" featured works by Bashkirtseff and her schoolmates.

As a painter, Bashkirtseff took her cue from her friend Jules Bastien-Lepage's admiration for realism and naturalism. Where Bastien-Lepage had found his inspiration in nature, Bashkirtseff turned to the urban scene, writing, "I say nothing of the fields because Bastien-Lepage reigns over them as a sovereign; but the streets, however, have not yet had their... Bastien." By unlucky chance, both artists succumbed prematurely to chronic illness in the same year, and the later pages of Bashkirtseff's journal record her visits to the dying painter.

Dying of tuberculosis at the age of 25, Bashkirtseff lived just long enough to emerge as an intellectual in Paris in the 1880s. She wrote several articles for Hubertine Auclert's feminist newspaper La Citoyenne in 1881 under the nom de plume "Pauline Orrel." One of her most-quoted sayings is "Let us love dogs, let us love only dogs! Men and cats are unworthy creatures."

© 2022. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Marie Bashkirtseff or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

 Ms. Marie Bashkirtseff
Portrait du frère de l'artiste, Paul Bashkirtseff, 1876
Young Lady Wearing a Hat with a Blue Feather, 1878
Portrait of a young woman reading, 1880
Lilacs, 1880
Marie Bashkirtseff, self portrait, 1880
Georgette, 1881
Grenade, 1881
In the Studio, 1881
Portrait of Alexandrine Patchenko, the Artist's Sister, 1881
Un Condamné à Mort (A Man Condemned to Death), 1881
At a book, 1882
Boys in the Yard, 1882
Carnival in Nice Study 1, 1882
Despair, 1882
Girl Reading By a Waterfall, 1882
In the Mist, 1882
Oriental Woman, 1882
Parisienne, Portrait of Irma, 1882
Portrait of a Woman, 1882
Young Russian Girl, circa 1882
Autumn, 1883
Jean and Jacques, 1883
Portrait Of The Comtesse Dina De Toulouse-Lautrec, 1883
Spring, 1883
The umbrella, 1883
A meeting, 1884 detail
A meeting, 1884
Douleur de Nausicaa (Nausica's Pain), 1884
Portrait of Mme X, 1884

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