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Permanent Collection
The Permanent Collection
  mw1748.jpg
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Berthe Morisot (French, 1841-1895)
The Cage
1885
Oil on canvas, 19 7/8 x 15 in.
Gift of Wallace and Wilhelmina Holladay

Painted in 1885, The Cage typifies Morisot's mature style. Around 1880 Morisot, Edouard Manet, and Eva Gonzalès began experimenting with painting on unprimed canvas. The texture of the heavy woven fabric affected Morisot's paint application, which became increasingly loose and sketchy. Using a limited palette dominated by brown, white, and green, the artist constructed a still life comprising a birdcage and a bowl of flowers against an ambiguous background of choppily executed strokes of paint. A study of juxtaposed forms and solids against voids, The Cage demonstrates Morisot's ability to give a painting the same unstudied appearance as a watercolor.

 
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Find out more about art in the collection and artist profiles in Women Artists: Works from the National Museum of Women in the Arts, available in the Museum Shop.




 
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