Sunday, April 17, 2016

Watteau's ghostly characters at the British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Commedia dell'Arte troupe
ca. 1715-16
etching
British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau never reached the age of forty. He died in 1721, only outliving the ancient Louis XIV by six years. The old king's taste for elaboration, for stiffness, for hierarchy buttressed by allegory and mythology, had dominated French taste since the middle of the previous century. Watteau arrived on earth in order to destroy that aesthetic empire, and he did so, not by confrontation but by evasion.

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Study of a seated woman
early 18th century
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Three studies of men
early 18th century
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Studies of a woman
early 18th century
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Woman in a striped dress, seen from the back 
early 18th century
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Seated woman
early 18th century
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Portrait studies of two daughters of Pierre Sirois
1718
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Two men dancing and an old man with a crutch
early 18th century
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Servant in Oriental dress carrying a salver
ca. 1715
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Five studies of women seated on the ground
early 18th century
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Studies of a woman's head
early 18th century
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Studies of a woman with a head-dress
early 18th century
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Two seated women
early 18th century
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Antoine Watteau
Two women
early 18th century
drawing
British Museum

All images are from collections at the British Museum.