Romaine Lacaux

Description

This painting may be Renoir's earliest signed canvas. Its sensitive display of color and light communicates an ideal of delicate, youthful beauty. The luminous tones of the background drapery and of the child's white blouse result from the artist's careful observation of reflected light and color on translucent materials. The delicate nuances of color, particularly in the young girl's face, reveal Renoir's previous training as a decorator of porcelain. He painted this portrait, commissioned by the vacationing Lacaux family, during his stay at an artist's colony in the village of Barbizon, near Paris.

Provenance

Lacaux family, Paris, France; Edmond Decap, Paris, France, by descent to Mme. Maruice Barret-Decap; Mme. Maurice Barret-Decap, Paris, France (-1929); (Drouot, Paris, France, December 12, 1929, lot 12, Barret-Decap Sale, sold to Roger Berheim) (1929-1941); (Roger Bernheim, Paris, France, sold to Jacques Seligmann & Co.,) (by 1941); (Jacques Seligmann & Co., New York, NY, December 2, 1941, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art) (1941-1942); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1942-)

Romaine Lacaux

Pierre-Auguste Renoir

1864

Accession Number

1942.1065

Medium

oil on fabric

Dimensions

Framed: 106.7 x 89.2 x 8.9 cm (42 x 35 1/8 x 3 1/2 in.); Unframed: 81.3 x 65 cm (32 x 25 9/16 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Gift of the Hanna Fund