In Paris–A Café Artist
An iconic Gilded Age illustrator, Gibson described and satirized the social habits of upperclass Americans in New York and Boston, selling his first drawing to Life Magazine in 1886 and remaining attached to that publication for three decades (he became editor in 1918 and finally owner). The artist famously created the Gibson Girl, said to have been inspired by Irene Langhorne (whom he married in 1895) and her three glamorous sisters. This image portrays a range of types lounging in an outdoor café in Paris must have been made during a trip of 1893 or 1894--Gibson knew the city well, having studied at the Académie Julian. With genial humor he represents a bohemian couple, the woman's floppy velvet hat distinctly different from that of the fashionably veiled lady behind her. Her companion slouches in his chair while being sketched by a street artist whose work fascinates a Zouave (a French soldier whose distinctive uniform derives from his regiment's Algerian origins).
Artwork Details
- Title: In Paris–A Café Artist
- Artist: Charles Dana Gibson (American, Roxbury, Massachusetts 1867–1944 New York)
- Sitter: Frederick William MacMonnies (American, New York 1863–1937 New York)
- Sitter: Eugénie (Nini) Pasque (French, active 1890s)
- Date: 1894
- Medium: Pen and ink over graphite on artist's board
- Dimensions: Sheet: 21 9/16 × 33 3/8 in. (54.8 × 84.8 cm)
- Classification: Drawings
- Credit Line: Gift of Jacqueline Loewe Fowler, 2020
- Object Number: 2021.16.6
- Curatorial Department: Drawings and Prints
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