“Self-portrait in a Straw Hat” by Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun

Self-portrait in a Straw Hat by Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun Self-portrait in a Straw Hat by Louise Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun portrays the prominent French p...
Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun
Self-portrait in a Straw Hat
Louise Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun
Vigée Le Brun

"Self-portrait in a Straw Hat" by Louise Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun

“Self-portrait in a Straw Hat” by Louise Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun portrays the prominent French portrait painter who was a friend and favorite artist of Marie Antoinette.

In the 1700s, Madame Le Brun painted portraits of nobility, and with Marie Antoinette’s support, her career flourished. She painted more than 30 paintings of the queen and her family but was forced to flee the country during the French Revolution.

After fleeing the French, she lived and worked in the major European capitals. She enjoyed the patronage of European aristocrats, actors, and writers, and was elected to art academies in ten cities.

Le Brun’s artistic style was part of the aftermath of Rococo, while she also adopted a neoclassical style. Her color palette was Rococo influenced, but her style assumed the emerging Neoclassicism.

Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun

Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun (1755 – 1842) was a prominent French portrait painter of the late eighteenth century. Vigée Le Brun created a name for herself by serving as the portrait painter to Marie Antoinette.

Many of her paintings are owned by major museums, such as the Louvre, Hermitage Museum, National Gallery in London, Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, and many other collections in continental Europe and the United States.

Vigée Le Brun left a legacy of some 660 portraits and 200 landscapes, and when she was in her eighties, she published her memoirs in three volumes, called Souvenirs.

Born in Paris, she was the daughter of a portraitist and fan painter, Louis Vigée, from whom she received her first instruction. Her mother, Jeanne, was a hairdresser.

By the time she was in her early teens, Élisabeth was painting portraits professionally. In 1776 she married Jean-Baptiste-Pierre Le Brun, a painter, and art dealer, and soon after started painted portraits of many of the nobility.

As her career blossomed, Vigée Le Brun was granted patronage by Marie Antoinette. She painted more than thirty portraits of the queen and her family. In 1783, Vigée Le Brun was received as a member of the Académie Royale.

She was one of only fifteen women to be granted full membership in the Académie between 1648 and 1793. Vigée Le Brun’s membership in the Académie dissolved after the French Revolution because female academicians were abolished.

In 1789, after the arrest of the royal family during the French Revolution, Vigée Le Brun fled France with her young daughter, Julie. In her twelve-year absence from France, she lived and worked in Italy, Austria, Russia, and Germany.

After a sustained campaign by her ex-husband and other family members, her name removed from the list of counter-revolutionary émigrés. Vigée Le Brun was finally able to return to France in 1802.

She continued to travel, visiting London and Switzerland. Between 1835 and 1837 when Vigée Le Brun was in her eighties when she published her memoirs in three volumes, Souvenirs. She died in Paris in 1842, aged 86.

Self-portrait in a Straw Hat

  • Title:             Self-portrait in a Straw Hat
  • Artist:           Louise Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun
  • Year:             1782
  • Type:            Oil on canvas
  • Dimensions: 97.8 × 70.5 cm (38.5 × 27.7 in)
  • Museum:      National Gallery, London

Louise Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun

  • Artist:           Élisabeth Louise Vigée
  • Born:            1755 – Paris, France
  • Died:            1842 (aged 86) – Paris, France
  • Nationality:  French
  • Movement:  Rococo, Neoclassicism
  • Notable works:
    • Self-portrait in a Straw Hat
    • Self-portrait with Her Daughter, Julie

Vigée Le Brun

Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun

 

Explore The National Gallery

16th Century Paintings

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  • “Bacchus and Ariadne” by Titian – 1523
  • “The Ambassadors” by Hans Holbein the Younger – 1533
  • “Mary Magdalene” by Girolamo Savoldo – 1540
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  • “The Rape of Europa” by Paolo Veronese – 1570
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17th Century Paintings

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18th Century Paintings

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  • “Eton College” by Canaletto – 1754
  • “An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump” by Joseph Wright of Derby – 1768
  • “Self-portrait in a Straw Hat” by Louise Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun – 1782

19th Century Paintings

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  • “The Fighting Temeraire” by Joseph Mallord William Turner – 1839
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  • “Cimabue’s Celebrated Madonna is carried in Procession through the Streets of Florence” by Frederic Leighton – 1855
  • “Madame Moitessier” by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres– 1856
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Eight female artists from art history

Marie Antoinette’s Personal Portraitist

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“The main thing is to be moved, to love, to hope, to tremble, to live.”
– Auguste Rodin

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Photo Credit: 1) Louise Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

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22 August 2019, 12:52 | Views: 8146

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