
Portrait of Philibert Rivière
Historical Context
Ingres's Portrait of Philibert Rivière of 1805, companion to his wife's portrait, depicts the French administrator with the unflinching psychological directness that characterizes all Ingres's male portraits. Rivière's plain dark clothing and steady gaze create a study in bourgeois masculine authority — no aristocratic embellishment, simply the self-possession of a man comfortable in his social position. The portrait was part of the 1806 Salon group that established Ingres's reputation, though critics found his departures from academic convention strange rather than admirable.
Technical Analysis
Ingres uses a dark, austere background to frame the sitter's black coat and white cravat with sculptural clarity. The precise contour drawing and smooth paint surface reflect his Raphaelesque ideals of form.
See It In Person
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