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The Laundress (La Blanchisseuse)
Jean-Baptiste Greuze·1761
Historical Context
Greuze painted The Laundress around 1761, a genre scene depicting a young working-class woman at her laundry — bending over a tub, clothes wet and disordered — in a composition that combined genre observation with an erotic directness that made it immediately controversial. The laundress tradition in French painting was associated with low-life genre and the display of working-class female bodies in poses that exposed them to the viewer's gaze under the pretext of depicting their labor. Greuze's treatment occupies the ambiguous territory between sympathetic social observation and voyeuristic genre that was characteristic of Ancien Régime painting's engagement with working women's bodies.
Technical Analysis
Greuze captures the laundress in a natural pose with soft, warm lighting that flatters her youthful features. The handling of white linen and water creates textural interest, while the informal composition gives the scene an impression of spontaneous observation.
See It In Person
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