
Jacques Antoine Marie Lemoine (French, 1751–1824). Portrait of Jean Honoré Fragonard, 1797. Black chalk, stumped, and heightened with white chalk on beige paper, 12 5/8 x 8 7/8 in. (32 x 22.5 cm). Private collection
Surviving and Thriving:
A Rare Look at Fragonard in His Final Years
The final work on view in the soon-to-close exhibition Fragonard: Drawing Triumphant—Works from New York Collections stops us in our tracks as we are pulled in by the disarmingly direct gaze of a man who died 210 years ago. He is in his mid-60s, his features are weathered, his hair is gray, but his humanity shines through.
This recently discovered portrait of Jean Honoré Fragonard came to light on the French art market last June and was a late addition to this show thanks to the generosity of its owner, who had possessed the drawing for only a very brief time before agreeing to lend it. Before its discovery, the artist's appearance had previously been known primarily through his own quick sketches, such as the small, circular self-portrait in black chalk shown below.