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Women at work provided inspiration for many artists but sure you will be surprised how many artists had painted woman ironing and how they depicted them more than once
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Ironing 5
Jacques-Louis David (French, 1748 - 1825) La Repasseuse The island of Jersey Town Hall
James Pradier The Ironer - La Repasseuse, 1850 Musée d'art et d'histoire, Genève
Jesús Casaus (Spanish, 1926) La planchadora Jean Martin (1911 - 1996) La repasseuse, 1936
John William Allison (1867 - 1946) The Young Task Masters
Lee Blair (American, 1911 - 1993) Woman Ironing Lee Blair (American, 1911 - 1993) Woman Ironing II
Kurt Schwitters (German, 1887 - 1948) The ironer ?
Lino Enea Spilimbergo (Argentinian, 1896 - 1964) Ironing woman, 1936
Plain metal irons were heated by a fire or on a stove Léon Gaud (Suisse, 1844 - 1908) La jeune repasseuse
Louis Valtat (French, 1869 - 1952) A Woman Ironing
Louis Valtat (French, 1869 - 1952) Deux repasseuses
George Luks (American, 1867 - 1933) Ironing in the Public Laundry
Theodule Augustine Ribot (French, 1823 - 1891) La repasseuse Fernand-Louis Gottlob (French, 1873 - 1935) Repasseuses
Franco-Scottish School, early 20th century Woman ironing Ralph Hedley (British, 1851 - 1913) Old woman ironing
Jay Tacheny Women ironing
Manuel Cabral Aguado Bejarano (Spanish, 1827 - 1891) La planchadora, 1868 Pierre Jean Edmond Castan (French, 1817 - 1892) Woman ironing, 1882
Mary Whyte (American, 1953) Spring Ironing Mary Whyte (American, 1953) Steam Iron
The Greenville County Museum of Art - Mary Whyte exhibition called Alfreda's World (2003) Mary Whyte (American, 1953) Finishing the Quilt
An ardent revolutionary sews and irons a new banner “On the Eve of the October Holiday” in this 1970/75 painting by Aleksei P. Tkachev and Sergei P. Tkachev
Jacob Duck (Dutch, 1600 - 1667) Woman Ironing Utrecht, Central Museum
Alfons Roman Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage Bruxelles Karl Meunier The ironers -1884 Museum Leuven
Konstantin Makovsky (Russian, 1839 - 1915) La repasseuse 1900 State Museum, Rostov, Yaroslav
Konstantin Makovsky (Russian, 1839 - 1915) The Ironer 1880 Cherepovets, Museum of History and Art
Louis Joseph Anthonissen (French, 1849 - 1913) Atelier de repasseuses à Trouville
Louis-Léopold Boilly (French, 1761 - 1845) Young woman ironing 1800 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA, USA
Louis-Léopold Boilly (French, 1761–1845) Young woman ironing 1800 (details) Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA, USA
Unknown Woman ironing c. 1850-55 Daguerreotype, The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art Louis-Léopold Boilly (French, 1761 - 1845) La repasseuse
Sergey Makeev (Russian, 1957) Ironing 2001 Natalia Mikhareva 2009
Nurullah Berk (Turkish, 1906 - 1982)
Nurullah Berk (Turkish, 1906 - 1982)
Nurullah Berk (Turkish, 1906 - 1982)
Yurko Koch (Ukraine, 1958) Ironing
Thierry Lenoir, C'est l'amour 1989 Bruxelles Ministère de la Culture - Administration des Beaux-Arts
Torsten Wasastjerna (Finnish, 1863 - 1924) French Women Ironing 1889 Finnish National Gallery
Robert Frederick Blum (American, 1857 - 1903) In the Laundry
Paul Mathey (French, 1844 - 1929) Interior with woman and child Paul Lunaud (1900 - 1949) Repasseuse 1942
Robert Spencer (American 1879 - 1931) Woman ironing Ricardo (Panito) Brugada y Panizo (Spanish, 1867-1919) Sesión de plancha
Richard Winternitz (German, 1861 - 1929) Woman Ironing Édouard-Jean Vuillard La repasseuse 1868
Woman Ironing Clothes Vintage Graphics Old Design
Thomas Harrington Wilson (British, active 1842 - 1886) The ironing maid
Thomas Harrington Wilson (British, active 1842–1886) The ironing maid
Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881 - 1973) The room of the ironer (1904)
Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881 - 1973) Woman Ironing 1904 - Guggenheim Museum NY
Lyudmila Gurchenko Photo reproduction of Pablo Picasso's painting "woman ironing” 1901 Metropolitan Museum, New York Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881 - 1973) Woman Ironing 1901 Metropolitan Museum of Art NY
Peter Peart (Jamaica) Woman ironing clothes with fire heated iron, 1993 Raymond Debiève (French, 1931 - 2012) La repasseuse bleu
Man Ray (1890 - 1976) was an American visual artist who spent most of his career in France. He was a significant contributor to the Dada and Surrealist movements, although his ties to each were informal. The original Cadeau was made for Man Ray’s first Paris show in 1921. On the day of the opening, the artist passed a hardware store and bought a flat iron that he had seen in the window, along with a box of tacks and some glue. The iron, with the tacks fixed in a neat line along the smooth base, became a last-minute addition to the show. Cadeau was stolen almost as soon as the exhibition opened, but Man Ray calmly made another one Cadeau