
Portrait of Louis-Mathieu Molé
Historical Context
Ingres's Portrait of Louis-Mathieu Molé of 1834 depicts one of the most important political figures of the July Monarchy — a statesman who served successively under Napoleon, the Restoration, and Louis-Philippe, embodying the political flexibility that allowed French conservative elites to survive successive regimes. Ingres captured Molé with the penetrating observation he brought to powerful men, the sitter's combination of intelligence, self-control, and social authority conveyed through posture, gaze, and the calculated informality of pose. The portrait is among his most psychologically complex male likenesses.
Technical Analysis
Ingres captures the sitter's psychological intensity through the direct gaze and carefully modeled features. The austere dark clothing and plain background focus attention entirely on the face and hands, creating a portrait of commanding presence.
See It In Person
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