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Portrait de Mme Henriot by Pierre-Auguste Renoir

Portrait de Mme Henriot

Pierre-Auguste Renoir·1876

Historical Context

Pierre-Auguste Renoir painted Henriette Henriot — the Comédie-Française actress — on multiple occasions in the mid-1870s, this 1876 version at the Museum collection Am Römerholz in Winterthur being one of the most important. Henriot embodied for Renoir a type of Parisian femininity — the actress and performer who inhabited the public space of bourgeois pleasure — that recurs throughout his work of this decade. The multiple portraits of the same sitter across a few years suggest both genuine friendship and a painter exploring a model's range across different moods and settings. The Römerholz collection in Winterthur, Switzerland is one of the most distinguished private collections of Impressionist painting in Europe, giving this work a prestigious context.

Technical Analysis

Renoir's mid-1870s portrait technique combines the loose, varied brushwork of Impressionist plein-air work with focused attention to the face and expression. The surface is animated with his characteristic flickering touch — light playing across the face, hair, and clothing in broken strokes of varied color. The background is kept impressionistic to emphasize the figure.

Look Closer

  • ◆Henriette Henriot wears a light dress with a square neckline that frames her throat and décolletage — Renoir uses the neckline as the painting's primary compositional geometry.
  • ◆Her expression is open and slightly animated — the actress's professional ease with being observed rendered as natural rather than performative.
  • ◆Renoir's brushwork in the skin is his characteristic warm impasto — small dabs of orange, pink, and ivory layered to create a luminous flesh surface.
  • ◆The background is a soft warm blur — no architecture, no landscape — isolating Henriot as a warm form against warm atmosphere.
  • ◆The sitter's dark hair provides the strongest value contrast in the composition — Renoir uses the hair as a structural frame for the face.

See It In Person

Museum collection Am Römerholz

Winterthur, Switzerland

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
55 × 46 cm
Era
Impressionism
Style
Impressionism
Genre
Portrait
Location
Museum collection Am Römerholz, Winterthur
View on museum website →

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Girls with Hats (Jeunes filles aux chapeaux) by Pierre-Auguste Renoir

Girls with Hats (Jeunes filles aux chapeaux)

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Writing Lesson (La Leçon d'écriture) by Pierre-Auguste Renoir

Writing Lesson (La Leçon d'écriture)

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