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Thumbnail-size images of copyrighted artworks are displayed under fair use, in accordance with guidelines recommended by the Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for the Visual Arts, published by the College Art Association in February 2015.

The Morphine Addict


Morphinomaniac
Eugène Samuel Grasset (French (born in Switzerland), 1841–1917)
Printed by: Auguste Clot (French, 1858–1936)
Published by: Ambroise Vollard (French, 1867–1939)
French
1897

Medium/Technique Lithograph printed in black, gray, green, blue, orange-yellow, beige, brown, and white on gray wove paper
Dimensions Image: 41.5 × 31.2 cm (16 5/16 × 12 5/16 in.)
Sheet: 56.6 × 42.7 cm (22 5/16 × 16 13/16 in.)
Credit Line Katherine E. Bullard Fund in memory of Francis Bullard
Accession Number2022.1896
NOT ON VIEW
ClassificationsPrints
This work is a stark reminder that substance abuse and addiction are not new problems. Today, we associate late nineteenth-century Paris with liquid intoxicants like absinthe and champagne, but harder drugs pervaded the city as well. Morphine and opium addiction were common, especially in the demimonde of sex workers. The "respectable" world of upper middle-class art collectors had a morbid, even aestheticized, fascination with the world of prostitutes and addicts. Grasset's graphic depiction of the combination of desperation and release as a young woman injects herself epitomizes that strange fascinaton. Grasset likely intended the image, with its lithe lines and flat planes of color, reminiscent of fashionable Japanese woodblock prints, to be horrifying and beautiful in equal measure.

DescriptionPublished in L’album d’estampes originales de la Galerie Vollard
Signed In graphite, at lower right: Grasset
InscriptionsIn graphite, at lower right: Grasset
ProvenanceFebruary 19, 2022, anonymous sale, Michaan’s Auctions, Alameda, CA, lot 218, to Susan Schulman Fine Art, New York; 2022, sold by Susan Schulman Fine Art to the MFA. (Accession Date: October 12, 2022)