The Woman with Dropsy explained

The Woman with Dropsy
Artist:Gerrit Dou
Year: 1663
Material:Oil on canvas
Height Metric:86
Width Metric:67
Museum:Musée du Louvre
City:Paris

The Woman with Dropsy or The Dropsical Woman is an oil-on-canvas painting by Dutch artist Gerrit Dou, created c. 1663. It shows a woman suffering from edema and is considered as one of Dou's masterpieces.[1] [2]

Previously in Charles Emmanuel IV's collections, he gave it to Bertrand Clauzel in December 1798. Then adjutant-general to revolutionary France's Armée d'Italie, Clauzel offered it to the French Directory, which in 1799 added it to the Republic's central art museum (later to become the Louvre Museum), making it the first painting to be donated to that collection and placing Clauzel at the top of the plaque of donors on the "rotonde d'Apollon".[3] [4] It is still in the Louvre as INV. 1213.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Base Joconde entry.
  2. Web site: Louvre Collections entry. 1663 .
  3. Qui est la femme hydropique ?, article dans Sortir, supplément culturel de Télérama, 27 novembre 2019.
  4. Web site: RKDimages entry.