Madame Greuze Asleep, 1776. Creator: Jean-Michel the Younger Moreau (French, 1741-1814).

Madame Greuze Asleep, 1776. Creator: Jean-Michel the Younger Moreau (French, 1741-1814).

2-734-457 - Heritage Art/Heritage Images

Madame Greuze Asleep, 1776. Presented as an allegorical figure of philosophy, a woman slumbers among the traditional trappings of a scholar’s study: a writing desk with feather pen, piles of books, and a celestial globe. The model was Anne-Gabrielle Babuti, wife of Jean-Baptiste Greuze, who prepared the original drawing for Moreau to replicate. Contracts with printmakers show that Anne-Gabrielle actively participated in the production of her husband’s work for the print market. Although she appears mild here, Anne-Gabrielle had a reputation for being greedy and promiscuous. Greuze filed for divorce when it became legal in 1793, claiming that his wife "carried adultery to the point of shamelessness, cynicism to the point of unimaginable insolence."


Image Details


Medium
  1. Etching and engraving

Picture Type
  1. Print

Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 3820x5478
File Size : 61,307kb


Aliases

  1. 1980.23
  1. 150013
  1. 0940020266
  1. 1980.23
  1. 2-734-457
  1. 2734457

Buy a Print  

Keywords - refine your search by combining multiple keywords below.