
Paysage de cascade avec les bergers d'Arcadie
Hubert Robert·1789
Historical Context
Painted in 1789, the year the French Revolution began, this pastoral scene of Arcadian shepherds near a cascade represents the last flowering of the ancien régime taste for idealized classical landscapes. Robert’s Arcadian vision draws on Poussin’s famous treatment of the Et in Arcadia Ego theme, filtered through 18th-century sensibility. 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 composition is organized around the diagonal movement of the cascade, with shepherd figures arranged in a classical frieze-like manner. Cool greens and blues in the landscape contrast with the warm flesh tones of the figures.
Look Closer
- ◆Shepherds in the Arcadian landscape follow the tradition of Poussin's Et in Arcadia Ego — pastoral bliss shadowed by mortality.
- ◆The cascade descends behind the figures, its sound implied by the white rushing water contrasting with the quiet of the Arcadian shepherds.
- ◆Robert paints this Arcadian landscape in 1789 — whether the foreknowledge of that year's events is in the paint is for the viewer to judge.
- ◆The classical figures and idealised natural setting form a deliberate contrast with the actual Paris of 1789 visible from Robert's studio window.







