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Woman Washing

Jean Charlot

Artwork Details

Woman Washing
1933
Jean Charlot
lithograph on paper
18 5/8 in x 13 3/4 in (47.3 cm x 34.9 cm)
Museum Purchase
1948/1.53

Description

Subject Matter:

Jean Charlot was born in France, but at a young age moved to Mexico and later to New York. He quickly fell in with some of the most important Mexican Muralists of the 1920s and 30s such as Diego Rivera. Charlot's work often depicted religious scenes or scenes of everyday Mexican life, such as seen here. This work represents a subject, the washing woman, he first explored for a fresco in Mexico City in the mid-1920s. The figure in this work is characteristic of Charlot's style, showing a rounded, full, and somewhat sculptural village woman, meant to reference indigenous Mexican women.

Physical Description:

This work is a black and white lithograph. Central to the image is a woman who is crouching and bent over towards the right. She holds a paddle in her left hand and fabric in her right which fans out before her as she washes it. There is a dark sketchy area behind the woman. Her hair is dark and in two braids which drape back over her shoulders. She appears to be nude.

Usage Rights:

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