
Cleveland Museum of Art
Cléo de Mérode
Alfredo Müller
- Date
- c. 1903
- Medium
- color etching and aquatint
- Culture
- Italy, late 19th-early 20th century
- Department
- Prints
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Although a few printmakers experimented with printing etchings in color beginning in the 1870s, the idea did not really become popular until the 1890s. Müller represents this new interest and produced about 100 color etchings that combine densely bitten aquatint with irregularly wiped plates, epitomizing the turn-of-the-century taste for rich, painterly effects. The portrait of Cléo de Mérode (1875-1966), a fashionable dancer, is produced almost entirely in aquatint printed as broad planes and shapes of color that simplify and flatten the figure and define a shallow space. The very texture of the aquatint further emphasizes the surface and the flatness of the paper.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

Effect of Moon at Dieppe
Cleveland Museum of Art

The Wagon Driver and the Milkmaid
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Infante Don Fernando
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Embers Glow
Cleveland Museum of Art

Head of a Bearded Man, Leaning Back
Minneapolis Institute of Art
An Early Riser
Art Institute of Chicago

Head of a Young Woman in a Headdress, Leaning Left
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Anemonies
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Woman Bathing Her Feet in a Brook
Cleveland Museum of Art
Sailors, from the portfolio "On Death, Part One, Opus XI"
Harvard Art Museums
Mer de Glace, plate 50 from Liber Studiorum
Art Institute of Chicago
Portrait of Louis XV
Art Institute of Chicago