The Return of the Young Hunter

Minneapolis Institute of Art

The Return of the Young Hunter

Jean-Baptiste Greuze

Date
c. 1775
Medium
Pen and black ink, brush and black and gray wash, heightened with white, over graphite, on brown paper, laid down on ivory paper with framing lines in pen and brown ink
Department
European Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Modern viewers find Jean-Baptiste Greuze’s theatrical stagings melodramatic and contrived—akin to soap operas. But in his lifetime, Greuze was widely admired for elevating family drama to high art. The implicit subject here is the joy of parenthood. This emotional scene unfolds in a fashionable Louis XVI interior. A boy who has been out hunting is lovingly embraced by his mother, while his younger sister good-naturedly grasps his arm. The father, a dashing fellow, talks with a servant who accompanied the boy. His graceful ease and stylish dishabille, like the grand setting he inhabits, show that he is a titled man of means. The wide-eyed, round-cheeked little girl is a classic Greuze type, found in countless works by the artist and undoubtedly inspired by his own daughters, who were born in the early 1760s. France, Europe

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