
Fragonard: Drawing Triumphant features 324 color illustrations and is available at The Met Store and on MetPublications
Drawn to Fragonard: Drawing Triumphant with Author Perrin Stein
Drawn to Fragonard: Drawing Triumphant with Author Perrin Stein Rachel High, Manager of Editorial Marketing and Rights, Publications and Editorial Department
Jean Honoré Fragonard (1732–1806) was a virtuoso draftsman whose works on paper count among the significant achievements of his time. Focusing on the role of drawing in Fragonard's creative process and providing a modern re-evaluation of his graphic work, Fragonard: Drawing Triumphant showcases the artist's mastery and experimentation with drawing in a range of media. The catalogue brings together well-loved masterpieces, new discoveries, and works that have been long out of the public eye, thus illuminating the career of a ceaselessly inventive artist whose draftsmanship was at the core of his remarkable body of work.
I had the opportunity to speak with Perrin Stein, the book's author and the curator of the exhibition Fragonard: Drawing Triumphant—Works from New York Collections, about the "Fragonard myth," the changing role of drawing in the 18th century, and the reasons why she loves studying this artist.
Rachel High: There are several misconceptions regarding Fragonard that you cite in your text as the "Fragonard myth." What are some of those misconceptions, and how do you hope that this volume provides a different view of his work?
Perrin Stein: The "Fragonard myth," which has been gradually discredited over recent years by various art historians, has to do with reading his oeuvre through his biography, or in other words, mistaking his imagery for autobiography. There's been the assumption that his amorous scenes reflect a libertine lifestyle, and he's also been characterized, based on his upbringing in the south of France, as indolent, lazy, and pleasure seeking—all things that he depicts in his work. He wasn't read on a very deep level and his subject matter was taken at face value as being a confession of his own life. Very gradually, people have begun to put all of that aside and to look at him with modern art-historical eyes.
With this publication, I hope to shift focus away from the biography and more to the work and his working process. The contributors to the catalogue and I were all interested in the ways he left the standard path and forged a new kind of career through his friendships with collectors and with a focus on drawing. We wanted to make the point that, for Fragonard, drawings were not a preparatory step in a process, but that they were a form of artwork, and that he was part of a circle of collectors who felt the same way.