Art Institute of Chicago
Young Peasant Having Her Coffee
Camille Pissarro (French, 1830–1903)
- Date
- 1881
- Medium
- Oil on canvas
- Culture
- France
- Department
- Painting and Sculpture of Europe
- Institution
- Art Institute of Chicago
In the 1880s, at a time when many of the original Impressionist painters had begun to pursue independent styles, Camille Pissarro actively worked to keep the group together. He persuaded Gustave Caillebotte and Claude Monet to take part in the seventh Impressionist exhibition, in 1882, and also displayed a number of his own paintings of peasant girls. Here the small brushstrokes, applied one next to the other and sometimes overlaid with dabs of thicker paint, result in an irregularly built-up surface, serving to integrate figure and setting and evoke the textures of the young woman’s wool clothing.
The authoritative record is held by Art Institute of Chicago. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Linked open data
Authority identifiers that link this record into the wider web of cultural data — stable references you can follow to the source.
- Object type
- AAT300033618
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Art Institute of Chicago and other institutions.
Young Peasant Having Her Coffee
Art Institute of Chicago
Woman and Child at the Well
Art Institute of Chicago

Orchards at Louveciennes
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Rain Effect
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Line of Women Bathing
Minneapolis Institute of Art

The Beet Harvest
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Rue Damiette, Rouen
Cleveland Museum of Art
At the Window, rue des Trois Frères
Art Institute of Chicago
Woman Reading
Art Institute of Chicago
The Place du Havre, Paris
Art Institute of Chicago

Seated Peasant Woman
Cleveland Museum of Art

Self-Portrait
Cleveland Museum of Art