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  • Source: Young Woman Powdering Herself (Seurat)
  • Young Woman Powdering Herself (French: Jeune femme se poudrant) is an oil on canvas painting executed between 1889ā€“90, by the French painter Georges Seurat. The work, one of the leading examples of pointillism, depicts the artist's mistress Madeleine Knobloch. It is in the collection of the Courtauld Institute of Art and on display in the Gallery at Somerset House.
    Seurat kept his relationship with his artist's model Knobloch secret. His relationship to the sitter was concealed when it was exhibited in 1890.


    Hidden self-portrait


    Since the painting was publicly shown, the wall behind the young woman had displayed a bamboo picture frame showing a vase of flowers. In 2014 using advanced image technology, it was revealed that Seurat had painted himself at his easel, the object on the wall is now believed to be a mirror. After showing the painting to a friend, Seurat painted over the portrait with a table and flowers. Recounted by art critic Robert Rey, Seurat's reactionary behavior resulted from his close friend's awareness of a clever and amusing framework behind the self-portrait. Ironically, this concealed portrait is the only known self-portrait made by Seurat.


    See also


    List of paintings by Georges Seurat


    References




    External links


    Media related to Young Woman Powdering Herself at Wikimedia Commons

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