Lettres de Marie Bashkirtseff Préface de François Coppée

audiobook

Lettres de Marie Bashkirtseff Préface de François Coppée

by Marie Bashkirtseff

FR·~3 hours·13 chapters

Chapters

13 total
1

LETTRES DE MARIE BASHKIRTSEFF

0:06
2

PRÉFACE par FRANÇOIS COPPÉE de l'Académie française

8:26
3

1868-1874

6:36
4

1875

27:37
5

1876

18:16
6

1877

13:15
7

1878

12:50
8

1879

9:11
9

1880

14:53
10

1881

21:19

Description

Through a series of intimate letters, the reader is invited into the world of a young Russian artist living in Paris in the 1880s. The writer describes the first moment he meets Marie Bashkirtseff, a strikingly petite woman whose eyes burn with curiosity and whose brush captures the energy of everyday life. Her charm is a blend of gentle grace and a fierce determination that hints at a mind far beyond her years.

The correspondence reveals Marie’s daily routine: mornings spent in a sun‑lit studio surrounded by unfinished canvases, afternoons lost among stacks of foreign literature, and evenings at lively salons where her work is both praised and contested. She shares candid reflections on the struggle of being a foreign woman in the Parisian art scene, the exhilaration of receiving a medal, and the relentless drive that pushes her to produce dozens of sketches and studies. Her voice is vivid, mixing artistic critique with personal longing, making the letters feel like a living diary of a talent on the brink of recognition.

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Details

Full title

Lettres de Marie Bashkirtseff Préface de François Coppée Préface de François Coppée

Language

fr

Duration

~3 hours (217K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Mireille Harmelin and the Online Distributed Proofreaders Europe at http://dp.rastko.net. This file was produced from images generously made available by the Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF/Gallica)

Release date

2006-04-02

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Marie Bashkirtseff

Marie Bashkirtseff

1858–1884

A brilliant young painter and diarist, she turned her short life into one of the most vivid self-portraits of the 19th century. Her journal captures ambition, insecurity, artistic hunger, and the fierce determination to be remembered.

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