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A work made of pen and brush and black and brown wash and graphite, heightened with white gouache on cream laid paper.

Phaedre, Having Declared Her Passion, Attempts to Kill Herself with the Sword of Hippolytus

c. 1801

Anne-Louis Girodet de Roucy-Trioson French, 1767-1824

France

This drawing of a scene from the tragedy Phaedra was for a deluxe edition of the plays of the French dramatist Jean Racine (1639–1699) illustrated by Jacques-Louis David’s pupil Girodet. The moment depicted is Phaedra’s attempted suicide after her stepson, Hippolytus, rejects her amorous advances. About his drawings for the plays of Racine, Girodet wrote: “It is wrong that drawings are seen as mere drawings; they demand the same conception and almost as much study as a painting.”

Pen and brush and black and brown wash and graphite, heightened with white gouache on cream laid paper

Prints and Drawings