La toilette (Woman Washing Herself)
Maker
(artist)
1832-1883
(etcher)
1832-1883
1832-1883
(etcher)
1832-1883
Title
La toilette (Woman Washing Herself)
Date of Production
1862
Medium
Etching
Dimensions
Height: 28.4 cm
Width: 22.4 cm
Width: 22.4 cm
Accession Number
G.1935.SC.188
Mode of Acquisition
Samuel Courtauld, gift, 1935
Credit
The Courtauld, London (Samuel Courtauld Trust)
Copyright
Work in the public domain
Location
Not currently on display
Keywords
Notes
Manet made the drawing representing La toilette in preparation for the more elaborately worked etching. The outlines of the central figure in the drawing were incised, allowing the artist to transfer his design on to the surface of the etching plate. In certain places, Manet pressed so hard that his stylus cut through the bather’s contours, splitting the paper. The figure was transferred to the etching plate facing the same direction as the drawing but when printed the image was reversed. The model is probably Suzanne Leenhoff, who modelled frequently for the artist and would later marry him. She sits on a pouf with the indication of a basin at her feet while a loosely drawn servant in the background gathers up clothes. Manet captures a moment when, while bathing or drying herself, neither nude nor fully clothed, she catches the viewer’s eye, which causes her to clutch the fabric to her chest and flash a wary look. Manet’s use of red chalk – a once favoured drawing material that by the mid nineteenth century had become more unusual – and his choice to tackle the time-honoured subject-matter of a bathing nude interrupted in her task reveal his engagement with his artistic predecessors. Unlike depictions of the biblical or mythological bathing figures of Bathsheba, Susanna or Diana, who traditionally avert their gaze, Manet’s figure looks directly out and reacts, emphasising the viewer’s intrusive presence and voyeurism. Manet’s early etchings were often copies after his own paintings, and it has been suggested that this etching may reproduce a painted study, also entitled La toilette, which is lost today but recorded by Manet’s friend Antonin Proust. In the drawing, the horizontal line across the knees may indicate where Manet once considered cropping the image, but he chose to include the full figure in the etching.
Provenance
Purchased by Samuel Courtauld from the Leicester Galleries, London, August 1928; Courtauld Gift, 1935.
Exhibition History
The Courtauld Collection. A Vision for Impressionism, Louis Vuitton Foundation, Paris, 20/02/2019-17/06/2019
Bruegel to Freud: Prints from The Courtauld Gallery, The Courtauld Gallery, London, 19/06/2014-21/09/2014
Gainsborough's 'Diana and Actaeon' Revealed, Gainsborough's House, Sudbury, Suffolk, England, 11/06/2011-17/09/2011 ...More
The Courtauld Collection, Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto, 26/12/1997-12/05/1998
Drawings and Engravings from the Courtauld Collection, The Courtauld Gallery, London, December 1959-April 1960
France 1850-1950, Kettering Art Gallery, 1950 (June)
Samuel Courtauld memorial exhibition, Tate Gallery, London, 1948
long-term loan, City Art Gallery, Wakefield, 1946-1947 ...Less
Bruegel to Freud: Prints from The Courtauld Gallery, The Courtauld Gallery, London, 19/06/2014-21/09/2014
Gainsborough's 'Diana and Actaeon' Revealed, Gainsborough's House, Sudbury, Suffolk, England, 11/06/2011-17/09/2011 ...More
The Courtauld Collection, Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto, 26/12/1997-12/05/1998
Drawings and Engravings from the Courtauld Collection, The Courtauld Gallery, London, December 1959-April 1960
France 1850-1950, Kettering Art Gallery, 1950 (June)
Samuel Courtauld memorial exhibition, Tate Gallery, London, 1948
long-term loan, City Art Gallery, Wakefield, 1946-1947 ...Less
Literature
Serres, Karen (ed.), The Courtauld Collection: A Vision for Impressionism, Paul Holberton Publishing 2019
no. 5 on p. 106
ill. on p. 107
no. 5 on p. 106
ill. on p. 107
Inscriptions
Inscription: inscription : signed with initial : lower right and recto : : M
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