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Painting: Young Women Looking at Japanese Objects

Painting ID: 89609

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James Joseph Jacques Tissot Young Women Looking at Japanese Objects

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James Joseph Jacques Tissot:
James Jacques Joseph Tissot (15 October 1836 - 8 August 1902) was a French painter, who spent much of his career in Britain. Tissot was born in Nantes, France. In about 1856, he began study at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris under Hippolyte Flandrin and Lamothe, and became friendly with Edgar Degas and James Abbott McNeill Whistler. Tissot exhibited in the Paris Salon for the first time in 1859, two portraits of women and three scenes in medieval dress from Faust. The latter show the influence of the Belgian painter Henri Leys (Jan August Hendrik Leys), whom he had met in Antwerp in 1859. In the mid-1860s, however, Tissot began to concentrate on depicting women, often although not always shown in modern dress. Like contemporaries such as Alfred Stevens and Claude Monet, Tissot also explored japonisme, including Japanese objects and costumes in his pictures. A portrait of Tissot by Degas from these years (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York) shows him with a Japanese screen hanging on the wall.

Related Paintings to James Joseph Jacques Tissot :.
| Gerard ter Borch--A Woman Playing the Theorbo-Lute and a Cavalier | Jean-Baptiste Oudry -- The Dance | Pierre Guerin (1774-1833) -- Bust of a Young Girl | Antonio de Espinosa -- The Twelve Months of the Year | Charles Claude de Flahaut (1730-1809), Comte d Angiviller | | Portrait of Eugene Bouguereau | Mining women s cotton | Portrait of Bier | The Nativity | Woman with Flowers in Her Hands |


 


 

 

 

 

 

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James Joseph Jacques Tissot