A Woman Ironing, 1873
Oil on canvas
21 3/8 x 15 1/2 in. (54.3 x 39.4 cm)
H. O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929 (29.100.44)
In their quest for subject matter that spoke to the contemporary urban experience,
Degas and Naturalist writers such as the Goncourt brothers and Émile Zola discovered the
image of the laundress.
In his novel The Dram Shop, Zola
describes laundresses at work, detailing the physically demanding labor involved in the
act of pressing the iron against the board (see Reff, Degas:
The Artist's Mind). Similarly, Degas emphasizes the strenuous effort involved in
the task of ironing by painting the woman in a bent posture. Both writer and painter
communicate the oppressive environment in which these women worked. In Degas's painting,
for example, we see a room filled with the steam from the iron and may imagine the
suffocating heat.
Both Zola and Degas, however, also articulate the beauty of such a scene. Degas's
laundress is darkened by shadow, her figure silhouetted against the white background.
Light permeates the room and mingles with the steam of the iron. Degas's use of color and
his abstract brushwork literally and figuratively illuminate the visual appeal of the
environment. One focuses less on the woman's hardship and more on the lyrical rendering of
atmosphere, light, and form. Although slides distort images and mask a painting's texture,
even in reproduction one can see how Degas uses broad, thick strokes to make the
intangible palpable.
Five of Degas's pictures of laundresses, including this one, were shown at the second
Impressionist exhibition in 1876.