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Bacchante with an Amphora
Jean-Baptiste Greuze·1790
Historical Context
This Bacchante with an amphora is one of several mythological female figures Greuze painted around 1790 for the collector's market. These sensual subjects allowed Greuze to explore the boundary between classical idealism and the suggestive innocence that characterized his famous genre heads of young women. Characteristic of the artist's mature approach, the work displays theatrically posed figures, expressive faces registering emotion with unsubtle directness, a palette ranging from Rococo pastels in early works to colder, more sober tones after the Revolution.
Technical Analysis
Rich, warm tonalities and fluid brushwork define the figure against a dark ground, with the amphora providing a compositional anchor and classical reference.
See It In Person
More by Jean-Baptiste Greuze

Head of a Young Woman
Jean-Baptiste Greuze·possibly 1780s

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Madame Jean-Baptiste Nicolet (Anne Antoinette Desmoulins, 1743–1817)
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Ange Laurent de La Live de Jully
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