06/24/2026
A man talks to a young woman on a swing. A young girl watches them alongside another man, leaning against a tree. They appear to have surprised the couple in conversation, just as we, the viewer, have. As if in a snapshot, Renoir catches the glances turned towards the man seen from the back while the young woman looks away, her cheeks rosy with embarrassment.
“La Balançoire”, or “The Swing” bears many similarities to Renoir’s seminal “Le Bal du Moulin de la Galette. Both pictures were painted in the summer of 1876 and the same carefree atmosphere infuses both pictures. As in “Le Bal”, Renoir places particular emphasis on catching the effects of sunlight dappled by the foliage. The quivering light is rendered by the patches of pale colour, particularly on the clothing and the ground. The models of “La Balançoire”, namely Renoir’s brother Edmond, the painter Norbert Goeneutte, and Jeanne, a young woman from Montmartre, can all be spotted dancing in “Le Bal”. Both paintings were in the end purchased by the same buyer, a name we all know: Gustave Caillebotte.
“La Balançoire” is currently on show in the Musée d’Orsay’s exhibition “Renoir and Love. A Joyful Modernity (1865-1885)”, on display until July 19th 2026.
AFMO members benefit from skip-the-line and early hours access to this exhibition.
Auguste Renoir, La Balançoire, 1876, © GrandPalaisRmn (musée d’Orsay) / Sylvie Chan-Liat