Isabella Teotochi Marini by Élisabeth Vigee Le Brun - 1792 - 48.3 × 35.2 cm Toledo Museum of Art Isabella Teotochi Marini by Élisabeth Vigee Le Brun - 1792 - 48.3 × 35.2 cm Toledo Museum of Art

Isabella Teotochi Marini

Oil on paper mounted on canvas • 48.3 × 35.2 cm
  • Élisabeth Vigee Le Brun - April 16, 1755 - March 30, 1842 Élisabeth Vigee Le Brun 1792

Court painter and close friend to French queen Marie-Antoinette, Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun had to escape the imprisonments and beheadings-by-guillotine of the French Revolution. She left Paris for Venice in 1792. That year she was introduced to Isabella Teotochi Marini (1760–1836), the subject of this portrait. The introduction was made by Dominique Vivant Denon, a scholar, archeologist, and writer, who under Napoleon was instrumental in organizing the French museum system, including the Louvre. This freely painted portrait, inscribed by Vigée Le Brun to Denon, reflects the Neoclassical taste in dress at the time. Marini wears loose curls (rather than a wig, which had been the fashion until recently) and a flowing, simple, revealing dress inspired by classical Greek and Roman precedents.

With this masterpiece we continue our celebration of Women History Month and we present it thanks to the Toledo Museum of Art.  : )

P.S. Read here more about Élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun and the women in her portraits. <3