Cupid Crowned by Psyche
Jean-Baptiste Greuze·1787
Historical Context
Greuze painted Cupid Crowned by Psyche around 1787, a late mythological subject that extended his female head studies into a fully allegorical composition. The work shows the evolution of his style away from the bourgeois domestic genre that had made his reputation toward the more explicitly sensuous mythological subjects of his final decades — a commercial response to the changing taste of the period that was moving away from the moralizing domestic genre toward the Neoclassical classical subjects. Psyche crowning the sleeping Cupid with a garland is a subject of erotic tenderness that occupies the meeting point between Greuze's sensuous female heads and the mythological painting of his younger contemporaries.
Technical Analysis
Greuze renders the two figures with the luminous flesh tones and tender expressions characteristic of his style. The intimate scale and warm palette are more reminiscent of his genre work than the grand manner expected of mythological subjects.
See It In Person
More by Jean-Baptiste Greuze

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

Princess Varvara Nikolaevna Gagarina (1762–1802)
Jean-Baptiste Greuze·ca. 1780–82
_MET_DP-13040-001.jpg&width=600)
Madame Jean-Baptiste Nicolet (Anne Antoinette Desmoulins, 1743–1817)
Jean-Baptiste Greuze·late 1780s
Ange Laurent de La Live de Jully
Jean-Baptiste Greuze·probably 1759



