American Painting and Sculpture 1800-1945

Preparing for the Matinee
Preparing for the Matinee
Artist Tarbell, Edmund Charles
     nationality American
     birth-death 1862-1938
Creation date 1907
Materials oil on canvas
Dimensions 45 1/2 x 35 1/2 in. 57 x 46 1/2 x 2 1/2 in. (framed)
Location American Impressionism Gallery
Credit line Gift of Mrs. John G. Rauch, Sr.
Accession number 82.201
Gallery Label

The loose energetic brushwork in the woman's blouse and hair are elements of the Impressionist style.

Tarbell was a leading member of the Boston School of painters, known for their pictures of young women engaged in domestic activities.

Indianapolis Museum of Art: Highlights of the Collection (2005)

This lady, concentrating on adjusting her hat with a pearl-tipped hatpin, is typical of Edmund Tarbell's refined, everyday subjects. Like Frank Benson, Tarbell belonged to the Boston School, which flourished during the early decades of the 20th century. These painters were renowned for their pictures of young women engaged in sedentary and often solitary domestic activities, or posed in sunlit outdoor settings. In his interior compositions, Tarbell concentrated upon the insular world of upper-class women, depicting them in an austere but elegant manner, attired in the latest fashions.

The passages of loose, energetic brushwork in her blouse and hair display the spontaneity that Tarbell brought to his outdoor Impressionist paintings. Artists of the Boston School explored aspects of texture, which can be seen in the handling of the creases in the woman's blouse and the feathers on her hat. Tarbell's expert drawing technique is evident in the rendering of the sitter's arm and the handling of her facial features. Like many painters of the Boston School, Tarbell was influenced by the paintings of the 17th-century Dutch artist Jan Vermeer, whose works were rediscovered in the mid-19th century. In fact, a corner of one of Vermeer's paintings appears at the upper right of Tarbell's elegant interior as a tribute to this Dutch master.

[Boston School artists] are more interested in the rendering of beauty than of fact.
-Artist and critic Guy Pène Du Bois, 1915
Provenance
Washington University, St. Louis 1909 (on loan to the City Art Museum); sold by Kende Galleries in New York May 4, 1945; J.W. Young Art Gallery at Chicago; purchased by John G. Rauch Sr. of Indianapolis; donated to the IMA by Mrs. John G. Rauch Sr.


Descriptive tags added by visitors:

1890's, big black hat, consumed, critical, dress up, flushed cheek, getting pretty, girl, good posture, hat pin, insecurity, looking in the mirror, nice skin, porcelain skin, primping, purple accessory, quiet, style, Tarbell, young woman adjusting hat
Click a tag to see more works with the same tag

Separate multiple tags with commas.
CAPTCHA
We use puzzles that computers can't solve to prevent spam from appearing on our website. Please solve the following puzzle before posting.
71-32.jpgThe Regatta Beating to Windward