Adoration of the Shepherds

Jean-Honore Fragonard

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Keywords: AdorationShepherds

Work Overview

The Adoration of the Shepherds.
Jean-Honore Fragonard
Date: c.1775
Style: Rococo
Genre: religious painting
Media: oil, canvas
Dimensions: 93 x 73 cm
Location: Louvre, Paris, France


Interestingly, this painting is the pendant of a painting of erotic theme, The Bolt, also in the Louvre.
The Adoration of the Shepherds is one of Fragonard's most famous religious pictures; he also executed a painting of the same scene. The composition focuses on the infant Jesus, who is symbolically placed in the center. The very subtle play of black chalk strokes and wash laid on delicately with a brush brings the scene to life and gives it a grave, emotional feeling. Contemporaries described this sheet as "drawn with facility and spirit."
A private commission
This drawing is linked to a painting in the Louvre (RF 1988-11). The latter was commissioned by Louis Gabriel, marquis de Veri, a distinguished art lover. Between 1775 and 1779, the marquess accumulated a large collection including works by Jean-Baptiste Greuze, Hubert Robert, and no fewer than ten paintings by Fragonard. The drawing and the painting are both dated about 1776.
Fragonard, a painter of religious subjects
Fragonard's reputation is largely based on his "boudoir" paintings, depicting lighthearted subjects (see the famous painting The Swing in the Wallace Collection, London), naked women, and amorous embraces. It is often forgotten that he was also a remarkable painter of religious subjects. In this register, Fragonard was most interested in themes centered on a child. Several paintings and drawings of the childhood of the Virgin or Jesus are known, including this one, where we see the Infant Jesus, surrounded by the Virgin, St. Joseph, and the shepherds on their knees. A very pale wash surrounds the group with a soft light, with little contrast, whereas, in his paintings, Fragonard employs light in a manner reminiscent of Rembrandt.
A study or a replica?
As is often the case with Fragonard, it is hard to tell whether the drawing is a preparation for the painting-suggested by the fact that the postures of the shepherds on the right are not exactly the same in the two works-or instead a variation inspired by the painting, a fairly common practice for Fragonard. Thus, for a number of subjects that were highly appreciated by his contemporaries, it is not unusual to find two or three paintings, drawings, or watercolors, very similar in composition, for which the order of execution is quite difficult to determine.