Artwork Page for Portrait of a Woman

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Portrait of a Woman

c. 1748
(French, 1685–1766)
Measurements
Framed: 108 x 92.5 x 11 cm (42 1/2 x 36 7/16 x 4 5/16 in.); Unframed: 82 x 65 cm (32 5/16 x 25 9/16 in.)
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

Though the sitters in his portraits often lack individualized traits, Nattier was fervently sought by French aristocratic women.

Description

Jean-Marc Nattier was a favorite portraitist of King Louis XV of France. He held the lucrative position as the court painter for Queen Mary Lesczynski, the daughter of the exiled king of Poland. The portrait was long thought to be of Madame Henriette de France, one of the daughters of Louis XV and Queen Mary Lesczynski, but this identification is no longer accepted and the sitter remains unknown. There has been considerable confusion over the identity of many of Nattier's sitters, as they tend to conform to an idealized concept of female beauty.
A vertical oil painting depicts a woman with light skin tone from the waist up, shoulders turned slightly right but looking out at us. Her gray hair is pinned up and decorated with flowers. She wears a cream dress with gold embroidery and pearls, featuring a large purple bow and a dark blue wrap draped over her shoulders. Against a dark, mottled background, she has flushed cheeks and closed lips. Smooth brushwork defines her features.

Portrait of a Woman

c. 1748

Jean-Marc Nattier

(French, 1685–1766)
France, 18th century

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