The Music Lesson is an oil-on-canvas painting by the French artist Jean Honoré Fragonard, created c. 1770, now held in the Louvre, in Paris, to which it was donated by Hippolyte Walferdin in 1849.
The subject was a frequent one in the Dutch Golden Age, most famously Vermeer's work of the same title, and was a common allegory for the five senses in Baroque art. Fragonard converts the subject into a fête galante scene of dreamy love, with the young music teacher courting his pupil and looking at her cleavage.
See also
References
- (in French) "Catalogue entry". 1765.
- (in Spanish) Eva-Gesine Baur, «El rococó y el neoclasicismo» en Los maestros de la pintura occidental, Taschen, 2005, pág. 361 ISBN 3-8228-4744-5.
- Arnaudet, Daniel. "The Music Lesson". legacy-uma.org. Retrieved 2021-04-11.
Jean-Honoré Fragonard | |
---|---|
List of works | |
Paintings |
|
Related |
|
This article about an eighteenth-century painting is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |