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#025: By Xavier F. Salomon, Chief Curator Transcript

Fragonard’s reputation never fully recovered from the setback of Madame du Barry’s rejection of his four canvases for Louveciennes. He left France for Italy, and then, in 1790–91—at the start of the French Revolution—he went to Grasse, his birthplace in Provence, in the south of France. There, he rented the villa of his cousins, the Maubert family, just outside the main entrance to the town.

In the main salon of Villa Maubert, Fragonard installed the four canvases that he had painted for Du Barry twenty years earlier, along with ten more that he painted to complete the decoration of the room. These additional ten canvases are on display here, separated, for the first time, from the four canvases painted for Madame du Barry. In these ten canvases, color is more freely and sketchily applied and generally lighter and softer.

The new set of ten paintings included four personifications of different kinds of love as overdoors, and a large canvas, Love Triumphant, that was installed over the room’s fireplace. An even larger canvas shows a woman resting against a column, her hair disheveled. This painting has often been interpreted as a reflection on the tragic destiny of Madame du Barry. The column is a sundial, the arm of a stone cupid indicating, with its shadow, that it is midday, the hour traditionally associated in eighteenth-century France with the loves of shepherds. Rather than abandoned by her lover, this woman is caught in an amorous reverie, in preparation for, or as a consequence of, her meeting with him.

For the corners of the villa’s salon, Fragonard painted four canvases that once again signal the continuity between exterior and interior. Rendered almost abstract are clusters of hollyhocks behind a wooden trellis. Fragonard’s last major paintings can almost be seen as precursors of the Barbizon School and of Impressionism.

In 1898, the fourteen canvases of the cycle at Grasse were sold to John Pierpont Morgan, who had them installed in his home at Princes Gate in London. Later shipped to the United States, the cycle was sold by Morgan’s son to Henry Clay Frick in 1915. Frick had the canvases installed in the drawing room of his mansion. In order to fit in the space, however, the canvases had to be installed in the wrong order. Moreover, three of the hollyhocks canvases did not fit at all and were relegated to storage.

The complete cycle of fourteen canvases is exhibited here for the first time in more than a century. Together, they tell the rich story of this important commission and reveal the way in which Fragonard’s style developed from pre- to post-revolutionary times. The cycle is the masterpiece of one of the most inventive painters in eighteenth-century France, an artist who famously is alleged to have boasted: “I would paint with my ass.”

The Progress of Love: Reverie

 (French, 1732–1806)
Dateca. 1790–91
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions125 1/8 x 77 5/8 in. (317.8 x 197.2 cm)
Credit LineHenry Clay Frick Bequest
Accession number1915.1.49
Collection History

Madame du Barry, Louveciennes (?). Alexandre Maubert, Grasse. Sold by Maubert’s grandson, Malvilan, to Wertheimer in 1898. Agnew. Bought by J. Pierpont Morgan in 1898. Duveen. Frick, 1915.

Source: Paintings in The Frick Collection: French, Italian and Spanish. Volume II. New York: The Frick Collection, 1968.

Not On View
oil painting of a woman seated on a plinth next to a standing man who leans towards her in a la…
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
1771–72
oil painting of five children with wings frolicking in the sky
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
ca. 1790–91
oil painting of a child with wings in the sky holding a knife in one hand and a white dove in t…
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
ca. 1790–91
oil painting of a child with wings in the sky with arms outstretched towards a white dove
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
ca. 1790–91
oil painting of a child with wings in the sky with arms outstretched and surrounded by white do…
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
ca. 1790–91
oil painting of a child with wings holding an arrow and standing in the grass with two white do…
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
ca. 1790–91
oil painting of a three women in a landscape, one of which has both arms outstretched and is be…
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
1771–72
oil painting of a landscape with a fence, trees, and flowering plants
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
ca. 1790–91
oil painting of a landscape with a fence, trees, and flowering plants
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
ca. 1790–91
oil painting of a landscape with a fence, trees, and flowering plants
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
ca. 1790–91
oil painting of a landscape with a fence, trees, and flowering plants
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
ca. 1790–91
oil painting of a seated woman in a yellow dress placing a crown of flowers on the head of a ma…
Jean-Honoré Fragonard
1771–72
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