In the 1870s-80s, Renoir frequently painted portraits for the families of the Parisian Jewish community. Through the collector
Charles Ephrussi, proprietor of the
Gazette des Beaux-Arts, Renoir met
Louis Cahen d'Anvers. The Cahen d'Anvers family was one of the wealthiest Jewish banking families in Paris. In 1880, Louis Cahen d'Anvers commissioned two portraits of his three daughters, the eldest of whom was Irène. The younger daughters Alice and Elizabeth would become the subject of a later painting by Renoir, now commonly known as
Pink and Blue. The ''Portrait of Irène Cahen d'Anvers
, also commonly called Little Irene'', is considered today as one of Renoir's masterpieces. At the time, for an unknown reason, Louis was so dissatisfied with the painting that he hung it in the servants' quarters and delayed Renoir's payment of 1500 francs. In 1883, the painting was first exhibited in the first exhibition dedicated exclusively to Renoir, held in
Paul Durand-Ruel's
Boulevard des Capucines gallery. In 1910 the painting was purchased by the wealthy
Camondo family, into which Irène had married in 1891. After the
fall of France, the painting was looted from
Château de Chambord by the Nazis. Like many other important pieces of European art, it became a part of
Hermann Göring's personal collection, Göring later traded the painting with
Gustav Rochlitz for a Florentine
Tondo. In 1946, ''Portrait of Irène Cahen d'Anvers'' resurfaced and was exhibited in Paris as one of the "French masterpieces found in Germany". The painting along with dozens of other artwork stolen by the Nazis was later acquired by
Emil Georg Bührle, a Swiss industrialist, art collector of German origin and CEO of the armaments company
Oerlikon, a wartime supplier of the German military. The painting remains part of the
E.G. Bührle Collection in
Zürich. In 2014, it appeared in the movie
The Monuments Men as one of the pieces of art saved by the
Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives program. In 2018,
Little Irène gained popularity in Japan when it was exhibited in
the National Art Center in Tokyo, as part of a series on
Impressionist artworks on loan from the E.G. Bührle Collection. ==Irène Cahen d’Anvers==