Marie Antoinette in a Park ca. 1780–81 Elisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun With its stately pose and lush handling, this painterly sheet depicting Marie-Antoinette in a garden embodies all the qualities that brought success to Vigée Le Brun as a portraitist to the ancien régime court. The young Austrian-born Queen, Marie-Antoinette was a central figure in Vigée Le Brun’s career, responsible in many ways both for her meteoric rise to fame and for her subsequent difficulties. While some artists, like her friend Hubert Robert, at the time of the Revolution sought their survival in adaptation, Vigée Le


Marie Antoinette in a Park ca. 1780–81 Elisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun With its stately pose and lush handling, this painterly sheet depicting Marie-Antoinette in a garden embodies all the qualities that brought success to Vigée Le Brun as a portraitist to the ancien régime court. The young Austrian-born Queen, Marie-Antoinette was a central figure in Vigée Le Brun’s career, responsible in many ways both for her meteoric rise to fame and for her subsequent difficulties. While some artists, like her friend Hubert Robert, at the time of the Revolution sought their survival in adaptation, Vigée Le Brun remained a staunch monarchist and found her new patrons in foreign courts and among fellow emigrés and royalist sympathizers. When Vigée Le Brun, a young woman of twenty-three, was summoned to Versailles in 1778 to execute a full-length standing portrait of the queen, it was a distinction which must have both propelled her career and incited jealousy among certain members of the Académie royale who shared her specialty. The result, a regal, yet conventional standing portrait in an interior "en robe à paniers" hangs today in the Kunsthistoriches Museum in Vienna. It would be the first of many such commissions for Vigée Le Brun, a challenging assignment as the public image of the foreign-born queen came increasingly under attack, and state portraits took on the burden of recovering her much-maligned reputation. The situation came to its most critical juncture at the Salon of 1785 when the exhibition of Adolf Ulrik Wertmüller’s canvas of Marie Antoinette and her two children strolling in the Trianon Gardens (Nationalmuseum, Stockholm) met with widespread derision, apparently for the perceived frivolity of their demeanor. To repair the damage, Vigée Le Brun was called upon to produce another portrait of the Queen and her children to be ready for the following Salon in 1787. Although it was not within her power to redeem the unpopular queen, Vigée Le Brun’


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Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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