Portrait of Dame Étiennette
Philippe de Champaigne
(French, born Belgium, 1602 - 1674)
France (Place created) 1647
Brush and gray ink
22.5 x 16.8 cm (8 7/8 x 6 5/8 in.)
Philippe de Champaigne
(French, born Belgium, 1602 - 1674)
France (Place created) 1647
Brush and gray ink
22.5 x 16.8 cm (8 7/8 x 6 5/8 in.)
A middle-aged woman dressed in a coif and layers of plain white
clothing--connoting the purposes of comfort and utility--faces the
viewer for a portrait. Her direct gaze and slight smile imply that she
knows the onlooker well, and in fact it is thought that she may have
been a domestic in Phillippe de Champaigne's home. An inscription on the
subject's laced bodice indicates this with an abbreviation: "Gardi,"
meaning "gardienne" or caretaker, beneath the name, "Dame Étiennette."
The
manner in which this drawing is executed, with its veracity of
observation and varied brushwork, conveys what must have been before the
artist: subtle degrees of shadow and light and texture defining
structures of bone, skin, and fabric. Soft, watery washes denote both
shadows on the wall as well as the volume of the woman's figure. A
dry-brush technique offers a tactile quality to what we see, from the
linen cloth of the dress to the softness of aging skin. getty.edu
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