
<p>Émilie Charmy was among the first women to exhibit paintings in the Fauvist style. Traveling to rugged sites on France’s Mediterranean coast, such as L’Estaque, depicted here, she created landscapes suffused with emotion and subjective expression. Laying down vibrant color in broad unstructured planes, she composed the scene as a collection of loosely joined organic forms. The swelling and tapering shapes along the composition’s edges produce a dynamic sense of movement that dissipates at the center, where we glimpse the calm waters of the Bay of Marseille.</p><p>Charmy was celebrated during her lifetime, but the accolades she received feel wildly gendered today. In 1921, for example, a French writer described her as an artist who “sees like a woman and paints like a man…from the one she takes grace and from the other strength, and this is what makes her such a strange and powerful painter who holds our attention.”</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1905
- Medium
- Oil on canvas
- Dimensions
- 57.3 × 73.7 cm (22 1/2 × 29 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Émilie Charmy
Artist

Painting
Émilie Charmy was a French painter active across the twentieth century, working in oils and watercolors with a modernist sensibility shaped by Fauvism and Expressionism. Her compositions favored interior scenes, still lifes, and portraits rendered in bold, non-naturalistic color and gestural brushwork. Charmy maintained an independent studio practice in Paris throughout a long career largely overlooked by major institutions until late-career reassessment.
Full artist profile →Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Émilie Charmy
- Year
- 1905
- Medium
- Oil on canvas
- Dimensions
- 57.3 × 73.7 cm (22 1/2 × 29 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1905-131861
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified