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Marcotte d'Argenteuil by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres

Marcotte d'Argenteuil

Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres·1810

Historical Context

The portrait of Marcotte d'Argenteuil from 1810 at the National Gallery of Art in Washington is one of Ingres's finest early portraits. Charles-Marie-Jean-Baptiste Marcotte was a lifelong friend of the artist, and this portrait captures both the individual and the social type with Ingres's characteristic precision. Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, David's greatest pupil and the defender of the classical French tradition against the Romantic movement, dominated French painting through the middle decades of the nineteenth century from his position at the head of the Académie des Beaux-Arts and the École des Beaux-Arts. His doctrine of the primacy of line over color — inherited from David but pursued with a fanatical intensity David himself had not required — defined the terms of the great debate between Classicism (Ingres) and Romanticism (Delacroix) that structured French cultural life from the 1820s to the 1860s. His influence on subsequent French painting — including Degas, Renoir, and ultimately Picasso — was foundational.

Technical Analysis

The portrait demonstrates Ingres's extraordinary ability to render character through precise observation. The smooth handling, exact contours, and careful attention to the sitter's costume and setting create a definitive bourgeois portrait.

Look Closer

  • ◆Marcotte's gaze has the steady, assessing quality of a man of intelligence and moderate wealth — Ingres captures the social type of the prosperous Parisian official with analytical precision.
  • ◆The cravat and waistcoat are rendered with the textile precision that Ingres brought to all his male portrait clothing — each fold and button of the cravat is an observed particular rather than a general description.
  • ◆The background is the warm neutral brown of Ingres's Roman portrait series — the same tonal field he used for all his early portraits, providing the ambient light of a well-furnished interior.
  • ◆Ingres's line — the defining contour of the face, the shoulder, the collar — is at its most confident in this portrait, each boundary between figure and ground drawn with the certainty of deep conviction about the primacy of outline.

See It In Person

National Gallery of Art

Washington, D.C., United States

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil paint
Dimensions
93.7 × 69.4 cm
Era
Neoclassicism
Style
French Neoclassicism
Genre
Portrait
Location
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
View on museum website →

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Edmond Cavé (1794–1852) by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres

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Madame Edmond Cavé (Marie-Élisabeth Blavot, born 1810) by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres

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