Spring (1877) by Alfred Stevens

  • Artwork Name
    Spring (1877)
  • Artist
    Alfred Stevens (1823–1906), Belgian
  • Dimensions
    Oil on canvas
  • Collection Source
    Musée d'Orsay
  • License
    Public Domain Content: Free for Personal & Commercial Use
  • 3058 x 6247 pixels, JPEG, 17.04 MB
  • Once payment is complete, the download link will be sent to your payment email.

About the Artist

Alfred Stevens (1823–1906), Belgian, A master of capturing the elegance and intimacy of bourgeois life in 19th-century Paris, this Belgian painter’s work exudes a refined sensitivity to texture, light, and feminine grace. Though often overshadowed by contemporaries like Manet or Degas, his meticulously detailed interiors and portraits reveal a quieter, more introspective side of modernity. Drapery spills like liquid silk across canvases, while the subtle interplay of mirrors and reflections hints at the psychological depth beneath polished surfaces.
Trained in Brussels and Paris, he initially flirted with historical subjects before finding his voice in scenes of women at leisure—reading, dressing, or lost in thought. Unlike the bravado of Impressionism, his approach was deliberate, almost forensic, with a jewel-like precision that bordered on the surreal. Critics praised his ability to render fabrics so convincingly you could almost touch them, yet his true genius lay in balancing opulence with melancholy.
By the 1860s, he became a favorite of Empress Eugénie and the haute bourgeoisie, though financial troubles later forced him into decorative work. His influence quietly permeated Symbolism and even early cinema—directors admired his compositional stillness, as if each frame held a breath. Today, retrospectives highlight his paradoxes: a realist who leaned into dreaminess, a chronicler of luxury who never lost sight of its fleeting nature.

Artwork Story

Alfred Stevens’ ‘Spring (1877)’ captures the delicate interplay of light and texture, weaving a moment of quiet elegance. A young woman dressed in flowing fabrics stands amidst blooming flowers, her gaze distant yet full of unspoken emotion. The brushwork is soft yet deliberate, with petals and fabric folds rendered in exquisite detail, suggesting movement caught in stillness. Stevens’ mastery of color—subtle pinks, creamy whites, and muted greens—creates a harmony that feels both fresh and timeless. There’s an intimacy here, as if the viewer has stumbled upon a private reverie, where nature and human presence merge effortlessly.

The painting whispers of renewal, not just in its seasonal theme but in the way it balances realism with dreamlike atmosphere. Shadows play across the woman’s face, hinting at fleeting thoughts, while the flowers seem to pulse with life. Stevens, known for his depictions of modern women, avoids sentimentality, instead offering a glimpse of quiet strength. The composition’s restraint—no dramatic gestures, just a turned shoulder and loosely clasped hands—invites closer looking. It’s a celebration of ephemeral beauty, where every stroke feels like a breath held too long.


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Spring (1877) by Alfred Stevens

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Digital product: Spring (1877) by Alfred Stevens

Specs: 3058 x 6247 pixels, JPEG, 17.04 MB

Quantity: 1