Renoir and the Nude
Renoir and the Nude
Learn about various iterations of the nude in Renoir’s long career—from his student days at the École des Beaux-Arts, to his earliest affiliation with Monet and the future Impressionists, to the last decades of his life.
FREE
The Morgan Library & Museum online
September 17, 2020 | 6:00 pm
Get tickets

Speaker details

Colin B. Bailey
Director, The Morgan Library & Museum

Event details

Advance registration is required to access the Zoom webinar.

Presented by

The Morgan Library & Museum
New York, NY

About This Event

In his thirties, Pierre-Auguste Renoir was already recognized as the principal figurative painter of the Impressionist movement, whose preferred subjects were beautiful, young Parisian women. As a painter of modern life, Renoir was also attached to the genre of the female nude, which he considered “one of the indispensable forms of art.” This lecture by Colin B. Bailey, Director, offers a brief survey of the various iterations of the nude in Renoir’s long career—from his student days at the École des Beaux-Arts, his earliest affiliation with Monet and the future Impressionists, and the “crisis years” of the 1880s, to the last decades of his life, in which the female nude became the dominant subject of his repertory.

Image: Auguste Renoir, Bathers, 1884-85 / The Morgan Library & Museum