Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A work made of graphite, with stumping, on ivory wove paper.

Portrait of Jean-Louis Robin

c. 1810

Jean–Auguste–Dominique Ingres French, 1780–1867

France

Ingres famously said that “Drawing is everything; it is all of art,” and that “Smoke itself should be expressed by a line.” His celebrated portrait drawings exemplify his devotion to pure line.
Ingres drew his portrait of Jean-Louis Robin, chief physician of the French Hospital in Rome, from the Villa Medici, the site of the French Academy in Rome, where the artist was in residence at the time. In the distance, drawn with technical precision, is Saint Peter’s Basilica.
Using only graphite, with an astonishing economy of means and in the absence of color and modeling, Ingres rendered a personality and a setting as fully realized as in any painted portrait.

Graphite, with stumping, on ivory wove paper

Prints and Drawings