

This was a popular style, especially for evening the woman in Figure 7 sports one with a bow. The ribbon is tied over the white collar of the dress. She also wears a black ribbon, probably satin or velvet, with a circular gold pendant around her neck. It is likely that there was a bow or some sort of decoration at back for visual detail. This would achieve the desired fullness behind, emphasized by bustling on the skirt itself, whilst keeping the front of the skirt flat.

6), a type of shorter crinoline with the bulk at back, underneath her skirt. Carré would most likely have worn a crinolette (Fig. The dress in figure 5 has a similar draped apron front, which is an overskirt piece that sits under the basque bodice and over the foundation skirt. 3), which is cut off-the-shoulder and has barely any sleeve, exposing her décolletage and arms.Īlthough it is difficult to identify details on Carré’s pink skirt, we do see the tell-tale edge of an apron front, equally ruffled, and we can assume that her skirt has volume in the back. Compare this day bodice to the evening bodice in Morisot’s 1873 portrait of Carré (Fig. The high neckline and longer sleeves of the dress signify this is a daytime outfit, since low necklines and short sleeves were reserved for evening gowns during the nineteenth century. Her dress probably looked similar to the purple gown in figure 4. Although Carré’s gown is mostly pink, the viewer can see a touch of white with her tiny ruffled collar and starched under-cuffs that peek out from under the edges of her gown. The bodice is a basque bodice, meaning that it extends beyond the waistline in a kind of peplum. Its waistline is at the fashionable waist, which in this era sat slightly above the natural waist. Her dress appears to be either silk taffeta or cotton voile. The sleeves are narrow and a little loose until midway down her forearm, where they flare out into engageantes (Simon 58). It should be noted that Blanche’s characterization of Morisot’s approach to painting is likely colored by gendered ideas about female artists of the time, which saw them as unserious and indecisive.Ĭarré is pictured in a light pink high-collared dress with ruffles along the center front and cuffs. “ constantly changed her mind and painted over what she had done once the session was at an end, and was obligated to pose for months at a time, without the sketch seeming to advance any further.” (Bailey 96) Although Carré seemed to be the perfect model, sitting “straight as a tent peg” like a “fashionable doll”, it took Morisot many sessions to complete the painting to her satisfaction. This portrait was created in Carré’s home, the Villa Fodor, which was built in 1856 in Passy, an elegant neighborhood west of Paris that was popular with upper-middle-class families. According to Jacques-Emile Blanche, who was present during the painting process, Morisot was indecisive about the details of the portrait. Three years after The Pink Dress was completed, she became the fashionable subject of Young Girl in a Ball Gown (Fig. 2), since the background was identified as the interior of Carré’s home (Bailey 24). In fact, the two sisters are speculated to be the joint subjects of a work that Morisot painted a year prior (Fig. She and her older sister Valentine were among Morisot’s earliest models. The young sitter in the portrait was well-to-do teenager Marguerite Carré, who was probably around sixteen years old when she first posed for Morisot. Morisot was only twenty-nine years old when she completed the painting, and it is one of the only surviving works from her early painting career (Metropolitan Museum of Art). Although the first Impressionist exhibition wasn’t until 1874, Morisot experimented with the style for many years prior, as The Pink Dress reflects. In 1864, twenty-three-year-old Morisot made her first appearance at the Salon, and she continued to exhibit her work in following years to mostly positive reviews (Garb). She learned to paint by copying the Old Masters, and upon registering as a copyist at the Louvre in the 1850s she made lasting connections with other artists. Like many young girls of the time with means, Morisot received private training to develop her art education. 1) was born in 1841 to an affluent family in Bourges, France.
