Jean Honoré Fragonard. Satyr's Family from Bacchanales, or Satyr's Games. 1763. France. Etching on ivory laid paper This set of four etchings may refer to ancient bas-reliefs Fragonard saw while visiting Rome with an important antiquarian, the Abbé de Saint Non (see , .455, and .456). The size of the paired oval and rectangular reliefs—one or more of which might derive from ancient engraved cameos instead of large-scale sculptures—remains ambiguous, although hidden objects in the surrounding foliage suggest a large scale. Regardless of their source, the popularity of Fragonard’s printe


Jean Honoré Fragonard. Satyr's Family from Bacchanales, or Satyr's Games. 1763. France. Etching on ivory laid paper This set of four etchings may refer to ancient bas-reliefs Fragonard saw while visiting Rome with an important antiquarian, the Abbé de Saint Non (see , .455, and .456). The size of the paired oval and rectangular reliefs—one or more of which might derive from ancient engraved cameos instead of large-scale sculptures—remains ambiguous, although hidden objects in the surrounding foliage suggest a large scale. Regardless of their source, the popularity of Fragonard’s printed reliefs reflected the taste for Neoclassicism in France at this time.


Size: 3000px × 2056px
Photo credit: © WBC ART / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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