Head of a Woman
Returned to lender
This work of art was on loan to the museum and has since been returned to its lender.Cordier cast this plaster mask after the original clay study for his bust of a woman (African Venus). By emphasizing the figure’s full lips, coiled hair, and dark skin tone, Cordier sought to create an idealized image of African beauty that would appeal to Western audiences who had grown increasingly interested in representations of Black people. Cordier believed his sculptures heralded a change in the understanding of non-Europeans, writing: "My genre had the freshness of something new, revolt against slavery, the budding science of anthropology, widening the circle of beauty by showing that it existed everywhere." Inexpensive reproductions of this mask were sold to artists working in Paris and beyond, reflecting the growing prominence of ethnography and exoticism as artistic subjects in the second half of the nineteenth century.
Artwork Details
- Title: Head of a Woman
- Artist: Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier (French, 1827–1905)
- Date: modeled 1851, cast 1851 or after
- Culture: French
- Medium: Plaster and paint
- Dimensions: H. 5 1/4 in. (13.5 cm), W. 4 3/8 in. (11 cm), D. 3 in. (7.5 cm)
- Classification: Sculpture-Plaster
- Credit Line: Musée d’Orsay, Paris, don de Marcel Cordier, petit-fils de l’artiste, 1933
- Curatorial Department: European Sculpture and Decorative Arts