He began his career as a painter of porcelain in Limoges, aged
thirteen, before studying with Sisley and Monet at the École
des Beaux-Arts in Paris. His early work flitted between sober academic
painting and freer, more colourful en plein air ('open-air')
work. He was, with Monet, at the forefront of the movement that
became known as Impressionism. The two artists painted side-by-side
on occasion, most famously for their paintings of the popular bathing-spot La
Grenouillère (1869), then just outside Paris on the
banks of the Seine.
Renoir's paintings were always light-hearted,
with soft-feathered brushstrokes capturing fleeting movement and
mottled light. His technique reached its peak in Ball at the Moulin de la Gallette (1876,
Musée d'Orsay, Paris).
His later works concentrate on the
female nude and he tended to emphasize simple forms and solidity,
as well as relishing pink and orange flesh, as this study illustrates.
Several versions of this pose survive, all probably intended as
finished pieces rather than sketches for grander work.
Crippled
by rheumatism in his last years, Renoir continued to paint with
brushes jammed between his fingers. 'If painting were not a pleasure
to me I should certainly not do it'.
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