The Laundress (Greuze)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Laundress_(Greuze) an entity of type: Thing

The Laundress (French: La Blanchisseuse) is a 1761 genre painting by French artist Jean-Baptiste Greuze (1725-1805), existing in two versions. The subject of laundresses, also known as washerwomen, was a popular one in art, especially in France. The second version is now in the Fogg Museum, Harvard. At 39 x 31 cm, it is just slightly smaller than the Getty's, and also dated c. 1761. It was possibly created to allow a print to be made of the subject. rdf:langString
rdf:langString The Laundress (Greuze)
rdf:langString The Laundress
xsd:integer 47657775
xsd:integer 1068077270
xsd:double 40.6
xsd:integer 33
rdf:langString Jean-Baptiste Greuze
rdf:langString cm
rdf:langString The Laundress
xsd:integer 1761
rdf:langString The Laundress (French: La Blanchisseuse) is a 1761 genre painting by French artist Jean-Baptiste Greuze (1725-1805), existing in two versions. The subject of laundresses, also known as washerwomen, was a popular one in art, especially in France. The prime version of The Laundress was one of fourteen works exhibited by Greuze at the Salon of 1761 and was part of the collection of Greuze's patron, Ange Laurent Lalive de Jully. The painting was mostly unknown for more than two centuries as it was purchased in 1770 by Gustaf Adolf Sparre and privately held in that Swedish art collection and rarely seen until it was acquired by the Getty Museum in 1983. The second version is now in the Fogg Museum, Harvard. At 39 x 31 cm, it is just slightly smaller than the Getty's, and also dated c. 1761. It was possibly created to allow a print to be made of the subject.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8166

data from the linked data cloud