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Eugène Carrière 
Gournay-sur-Marne 1849 – 1906 Paris
Woman Sewing

Charcoal and stumping on paper

355 × 265 mm

Signed (lower right): “Eugène Carrière”

Provenance:

Sale at Christie's, Paris, Intérieurs, 17 October 2007, lot 181

Sale at Christie's, Paris, Dessins Anciens et du XIXe siècle, 20 March 2024, lot 122

Private collection

In this intimate scene rendered in charcoal, Eugène Carrière shows a woman absorbed in sewing, with a smaller figure close beside her, perhaps a child watching or learning from the activity. The scene is built around the contrast between the pale cloth, which catches the light at the centre of the composition, and the dark, softly blurred forms of the figures surrounding it. The whiteness of the fabric draws the eye to the woman’s hands and to the act of sewing itself, making the domestic task the focus of the scene.

The child’s presence gives the scene a sense of intimacy and, possibly, instruction, suggesting sewing as a skill passed on within the domestic space. In this respect, the drawing seems closely related to Carrière’s wider interest in maternity, where the bond between woman and child is conveyed through proximity and gesture.

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