Photo of collection object Claire Campbell
Manet, Edouard. Claire Campbell, 1876. pastel with oil on beige canvas, Unframed: 55.2 x 45.7 cm (21 3/4 x 18 in.). The Fanny Tewksbury King Collection, 1956.718. CC0.

Claire Campbell

1876

Edouard Manet

Edouard Manet (French, 1832–1883)

Drawings

Claire Campbell, 1876. Edouard Manet (French, 1832–1883). Pastel with oil on beige canvas; unframed: 55.2 x 45.7 cm (21 3/4 x 18 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, The Fanny Tewksbury King Collection 1956.718 During the late 1870s, Edouard Manet began to experience health problems that made it difficult for him to work in oil painting. Instead, he began to draw using pastel, a powdery medium that allowed him to render line and color with each stroke. This work is one of numerous portraits that Manet created around this time with the medium. It depicts Claire Campbell, a fashionable young British woman whose father published The Daily Telegraph, a British newspaper. Manet used the velvety texture of pastel to render the subject's skin and hair, limiting his palette to mostly neutral tones such as white, gray, and black. Edouard Manet almost always depicted the subjects of his pastel portraits against plain colored backgrounds, as seen in this work.

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