Masterpiece Stories

Władysław Ślewiński, Woman Combing her Hair

Zuzanna Stańska 4 November 2018 min Read

Władysław Ślewiński was a leading artist of the Young Poland movement and one of the first Polish artists who went to Paris. It was unusual since most of the Polish artists back then rater went to Munich. But it was a good move as he became one of Gauguin’s students and developed his own art language drawing from French art of the last decades of the 19th century –  the synthesis of Paul Gauguin and the circle of Pont Aven group.

Wladyslaw Slewinski Woman Combing her Hair Wladyslaw Slewinski, Woman Combing her Hair, 1901, The National Museum in Krakow
Władysław Ślewiński, Woman Combing her Hair, 1897, The National Museum in Krakow

But today’s painting is less Gauguinesque – it reminds me of Degas‘ classic works, which were created ca. 20 years before. In Ślewiński’s artistic oeuvre a woman combing her hair is rather unique. It is intriguing and disturbing, it combines Art Nouveau form with Young Poland’s sensuality. In this intimate scene, the artist showed a half-naked model sitting on a bed, her side to the viewer and a cascade of hair of intense copper color falling over her face.

Wladyslaw Slewinski Woman Combing her Hair Wladyslaw Slewinski, Woman Combing her Hair, 1901, The National Museum in Krakow, detail
Władysław Ślewiński, Woman Combing her Hair,1897, The National Museum in Krakow, detail

We do not know who the portrayed woman was. Maybe it was the artist’s wife – Russian painter Eugenia Shevtsov, whom he had met in Paris and whose portraits make a great part of Ślewiński’s work.

Wladyslaw Slewinski Woman Combing her Hair Wladyslaw Slewinski, Woman Combing her Hair, 1901, The National Museum in Krakow, detail
Władysław Ślewiński, Woman Combing her Hair, 1897, The National Museum in Krakow, detail

With time Ślewiński’s art changed: he simplified forms and painted them very flat. He encircled areas of color with contours, though he sometimes blended color with color. While he sometimes ventured on the verge of abstraction, his style never departed completely from direct observation of nature.

Find out more:

[easyazon_image align=”none” height=”82″ identifier=”B001U6MWSG” locale=”US” src=”https://www.dailyartmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/41Mu4RGqqdL.SL110.jpg” tag=”dailyartdaily-20″ width=”110″]   [easyazon_image align=”none” height=”110″ identifier=”8392263537″ locale=”US” src=”https://www.dailyartmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/51lSnSLM5NL.SL110.jpg” tag=”dailyartdaily-20″ width=”80″]   [easyazon_image align=”none” height=”110″ identifier=”0895581043″ locale=”US” src=”https://www.dailyartmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/512VXxGYcwL.SL110.jpg” tag=”dailyartdaily-20″ width=”82″]

Get your daily dose of art

Click and follow us on Google News to stay updated all the time

Recommended

Vincent van Gogh, Wheatfield with Cypresses, 1889, National Gallery, London, UK. Detail. Masterpiece Stories

Masterpiece Story: Wheatfield with Cypresses by Vincent van Gogh

Wheatfield with Cypresses expresses the emotional intensity that has become the trademark of Vincent van Gogh’s signature style. Let’s delve...

James W Singer 17 November 2024

Masterpiece Stories

Masterpiece Story: Young Bacchus by Mary Beale

Mary Beale is a rarity: a prolific, well-documented, successful, 17th-century woman artist. Her painting of Young Bacchus perfectly illustrates how...

Catriona Miller 10 November 2024

The Statue of Liberty, Masterpiece Stories

Masterpiece Story: Statue of Liberty

On a small island just out of New York City’s harbor, Lady Liberty greets anyone arriving in the United States from the Atlantic Ocean. Over the...

Anastasia Manioudaki 7 November 2024

Masterpiece Stories

Masterpiece Story: Zeuxis Selecting Models for Helen of Troy by Angelica Kauffman

We’re all Angelicamad here! To celebrate the history painter extraordinaire Angelica Kauffman, let’s discuss her take on one of antiquity’s...

Gabrielle Stecher 11 November 2024