






Femme au corsage blanc, Jeanne Samary by Pierre-Auguste Renoir
1841-1919 | French
Femme au corsage blanc, Jeanne Samary
(Woman in a white blouse, Jeanne Samary
Initialed "AR" (lower right)
Pastel on paper
Among Renoir's most famous works are those that capture the ladies of his inner circle in his signature style. This vibrant pastel from 1879 depicts the young Jeanne Samary, Renoirâs favorite subject and most important muse at the height of his career. Compared to his 4,000 paintings, the artist made exceptionally few pastelsâonly about 150 totalâmaking this luminous work an extraordinary Renoir rarity.
Samary was one of the most captivating figures of late 19th-century Paris. An iconic actress at the ComĂ©die-Française, her fame rivaled that of the great Sarah Bernhardt. Beginning in 1876, Renoir created dozens of portraits of Samary, and she also appeared in all three of the artistâs most important paintings from this pivotal periodâBal du moulin de la Galette (1876), La balançoire (1876) and The Luncheon of the Boating Party (1880â81). Renoirâs close friend and biographer, Georges RiviĂšre, noted that âno portrait ever gave Renoir greater satisfaction than the ones he made of Samary.â
This magnificent pastel perfectly embodies this bond between Renoir and Samary. Vivid and spontaneous, the work captures an intimate moment, with Samaryâs blouse delicately falling over her shoulder. Renoir typically reserved pastel for his portraits of friends and family, as it allowed him to capture their true essence with speed and ease.
The year this pastel was created, 1879, was also one of the most important years of Renoirâs career. He entered the prestigious Salon of 1879, where four of his portraits were accepted, including a full-length masterpiece of Jeanne Samary. This pastel stands as a testament to this pivotal chapter for Renoir, portraying the muse who shaped his groundbreaking vision.Â
Renoirâs portraits of Jeanne Samary are exceptionally scarce, with most already held in prestigious museum collections, including the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. Similar pastels of Samary have commanded millions at auctionâamong some of the highest prices for Renoirâs works on paper. Importantly, the artistâs pastels are getting recent museum attention, with the major 2025-2026 exhibition organized by the MusĂ©e dâOrsay and the Morgan Library, Renoir Drawings.
This work is accompanied by its certificate of authenticity from the Wildenstein Plattner Institute, and it will be included in their forthcoming digital catalogue raisonné.
Drawn 1879
View the Dossier
Paper: 22 1/4" high x 14 1/4" wide (56.5 x 36.2 cm)
Frame: 36 3/4" high x 28 1/4" wide x 3" deep (93.4 x 71.8 x 7.6 cm)
Provenance:
Ambroise Vollard, Paris, acquired from the artist (as of 1907)
Ătienne Bignou, Paris (as âJeanne Samaryâ)
Lafarge, Paris
Victor Hélin, Paris
Succession Victor Hélin, c. 1945
M. and Mme Schmit, acquired from the above, 2009
Private Collection, Paris
M.S. Rau, New Orleans
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Description
1841-1919 | French
Femme au corsage blanc, Jeanne Samary
(Woman in a white blouse, Jeanne Samary
Initialed "AR" (lower right)
Pastel on paper
Among Renoir's most famous works are those that capture the ladies of his inner circle in his signature style. This vibrant pastel from 1879 depicts the young Jeanne Samary, Renoirâs favorite subject and most important muse at the height of his career. Compared to his 4,000 paintings, the artist made exceptionally few pastelsâonly about 150 totalâmaking this luminous work an extraordinary Renoir rarity.
Samary was one of the most captivating figures of late 19th-century Paris. An iconic actress at the ComĂ©die-Française, her fame rivaled that of the great Sarah Bernhardt. Beginning in 1876, Renoir created dozens of portraits of Samary, and she also appeared in all three of the artistâs most important paintings from this pivotal periodâBal du moulin de la Galette (1876), La balançoire (1876) and The Luncheon of the Boating Party (1880â81). Renoirâs close friend and biographer, Georges RiviĂšre, noted that âno portrait ever gave Renoir greater satisfaction than the ones he made of Samary.â
This magnificent pastel perfectly embodies this bond between Renoir and Samary. Vivid and spontaneous, the work captures an intimate moment, with Samaryâs blouse delicately falling over her shoulder. Renoir typically reserved pastel for his portraits of friends and family, as it allowed him to capture their true essence with speed and ease.
The year this pastel was created, 1879, was also one of the most important years of Renoirâs career. He entered the prestigious Salon of 1879, where four of his portraits were accepted, including a full-length masterpiece of Jeanne Samary. This pastel stands as a testament to this pivotal chapter for Renoir, portraying the muse who shaped his groundbreaking vision.Â
Renoirâs portraits of Jeanne Samary are exceptionally scarce, with most already held in prestigious museum collections, including the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. Similar pastels of Samary have commanded millions at auctionâamong some of the highest prices for Renoirâs works on paper. Importantly, the artistâs pastels are getting recent museum attention, with the major 2025-2026 exhibition organized by the MusĂ©e dâOrsay and the Morgan Library, Renoir Drawings.
This work is accompanied by its certificate of authenticity from the Wildenstein Plattner Institute, and it will be included in their forthcoming digital catalogue raisonné.
Drawn 1879
View the Dossier
Paper: 22 1/4" high x 14 1/4" wide (56.5 x 36.2 cm)
Frame: 36 3/4" high x 28 1/4" wide x 3" deep (93.4 x 71.8 x 7.6 cm)
Provenance:
Ambroise Vollard, Paris, acquired from the artist (as of 1907)
Ătienne Bignou, Paris (as âJeanne Samaryâ)
Lafarge, Paris
Victor Hélin, Paris
Succession Victor Hélin, c. 1945
M. and Mme Schmit, acquired from the above, 2009
Private Collection, Paris
M.S. Rau, New Orleans
























