● On view now — Gallery 201
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s model for The Laundress was Nini Lopez, whom he painted regularly between 1874 and 1880 in his scenes of modern life. He made this canvas shortly after completing the illustrations for Émile Zola’s L’Assommoir ( The Drunkard ), a gritty novel about the downfall of a laundress in the brutal and degrading world of working-class Paris. Unlike those illustrations , this painting lacks any portrayal of backbreaking labor or social oppression. Renoir chose instead to visually reference the 19th-century stereotype of laundresses being promiscuous, signaled in this and other contemporary depictions of such figures by the sleeve slipping off the shoulder. This young woman appears artfully disheveled and rosy-cheeked as she tends to the laundry in her affluent employer’s home, standing next to a basket of linens and a stove used to heat irons.
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The Apple Seller
Madame Léon Clapisson
Near the Lake
Landscape with Woman in Pink and White (Paysage avec femme e
Woman in Red in a Landscape (Femme en rouge dans un paysage)
The Seine at Argenteuil (La Seine à Argenteuil)
Children on the Seashore, Guernsey (Enfants au bord de la me
Girl at the Foot of a Tree (Fillette au pied d'un arbre)
Auguste Renoir — Young Woman (La Servante)
Auguste Renoir — By the Seashore
Berthe Morisot — Young Girl with Hat
Auguste Renoir — Young Girl in a Blue Dress
Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas — Retiring
Camille Pissarro — Washerwoman, Study
Auguste Renoir — Young Girl Bathing
Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas — The Morning Bath
Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas — Portrait after a Costume Ball
Auguste Renoir — Nini in the Garden (Nini Lopez)
Pierre-Auguste Renoir (French, 1841–1919) — The Apple Seller
William Glackens — Woman Seated on Red Sofa