
James Tissot: The Fashionable Beauty

Self-portrait, 1885
James Tissot (1836 -1902) was a painter known on both sides of the Channel as he spent important chunks of his life both in England and in France. Born as Jacques Tissot to a prosperous merchant family in Nantes, Brittany, he decided to pursue an artistic career despite his father’s misgivings. He studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris and, in 1859, aged only twenty-three, he already exhibited at the prestigious Paris Salon. He began with depicting the Middle Ages but soon moved to the portrayal of fashionable life, where he excelled. Tissot’s name is evocative of pleasing paintings of pleasing people in pleasing situations. In the 1880s he produced a series of paintings called La Femme à Paris. We had already seen one of them—and the story it depicts—in the post Without a Dowry. More of the series paintings follow here.

The Ladies of the Chariots

The Shop Girl

A Woman of Ambition

The Artists’ Wives

The Woman of Fashion

The Bridesmaid

The Circus Lover

Provincial Women

At the Louvre
A lavish three-part Tissot’s biography can be found here.
Related posts:
Without a Dowry: The Business of Marriage
Jean Béraud: The Most Parisian of the Paris Painters
Paris Markets in Victor Gilbert’s Paintings
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