
Ferdinand-Philippe d'Orleans by Ingres - RF 2005-13
Historical Context
Ingres's portrait of Ferdinand-Philippe d'Orléans of 1842 depicts the heir to Louis-Philippe's July Monarchy throne, the young duke who died in a carriage accident the same year the portrait was completed, making it effectively a posthumous monument. Ferdinand was intelligent, liberal, and genuinely popular — his death was mourned as a national disaster that threatened the stability of the Orléanist regime. Ingres captured him with characteristic formal precision, and the portrait's subsequent function as memorial added a layer of melancholy to its studied elegance.
Technical Analysis
Ingres portrays the prince in military uniform with his characteristic precision in rendering fabrics and decorations. The dignified three-quarter pose and neutral background reflect the conventions of official royal portraiture.
See It In Person
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