
La Fontaine
Hubert Robert·1701
Historical Context
This fountain scene, attributed to Robert with an unusually early date of 1701 (likely misdated, as Robert was born in 1733), is held at the Musée Cognacq-Jay in Paris. The intimate scale and decorative quality of the composition align with the Cognacq-Jay’s specialization in 18th-century French art and the taste of its founders, the Samaritaine department store magnates. Hubert Robert, known as "Robert des Ruines" for his specialty in architectural capricci combining real and imagined antique ruins, was the most popular decorative landscape painter in pre-Revolutionary France. His years at the French Academy in Rome (1754-1765) gave him direct experience of the ancient ruins that would become his signature subject: the Colosseum, Hadrian's Villa, the temples of the Forum transformed into settings for staffage figures of washerwomen, tourists, and peasants whose human scale measured the grandeur and the desolation of the ancient world. His paintings served simultaneously as decoration for aristocratic interiors and as meditations on the transience of human achievement — a reflection on history's relationship to the present that would become urgently relevant during the revolutionary upheaval he witnessed in his lifetime.
Technical Analysis
The fountain forms the central compositional anchor, with water effects rendered through translucent glazes and white impasto highlights. The surrounding garden architecture frames the scene in a classical stage-set arrangement.
Look Closer
- ◆The fountain's water jets are rendered as thin, luminous threads against the darker architecture behind them.
- ◆Small figures at the basin's edge establish scale — the fountain is larger than it first appears.
- ◆Robert's characteristic warm tonality bathes the stonework in a golden late-afternoon light.
- ◆Mossy overgrowth on the basin walls suggests an old fountain, merging architecture with natural accretion over time.







