Description
The French Revolution (1789–99) disrupted all traditional hierarchies, including that of art, which habitually placed history painting in the highest regard. When Isabey exhibited this portrait of his friend and fellow artist in the 1796 salon, drawings had taken on significance as a more personal and egalitarian form of art. Isabey depicts Barbier as a solid citizen of the new Republic. The tasseled cap and embroidered jacket recall Barbier’s service as a hussar, a type of soldier; the vest, cravat, and “dog-ear” hairstyle were popular among young men in Paris at the time. Traditionally, however, a fashionable man would not be shown smoking, an activity usually associated with lower classes. Isabey’s focus on the long pipe and steady stream of smoke made the drawing especially populist for the time.
Provenance
(César de Hauke, Paris?, according to departmental catalog sheet); Henry G. Dalton, Cleveland (according to departmental card)
Accession Number
1950.496
Medium
Black chalk with stumping, heightened with white gouache on beige wove paper
Dimensions
Sheet: 26.2 x 20.7 cm (10 5/16 x 8 1/8 in.)
Classification
Drawing
Credit Line
Gift of Harry D. Kendrick
Tags
Drawing Neoclassical & Romantic (1751–1850) Gouache Paper French
Background & Context
Background Story
Jean-Baptiste Isabey (1767-1855) was a French painter known for the precisely observed, elegantly composed miniature portraits that make him one of the most accomplished portrait painters of the French Neoclassical and Empire periods. Jacques Luc Barbier-Valbonne from 1796 depicts the sitter in the precisely observed, elegantly composed manner that distinguishes Isabey's best portrait work from the more general portrait painting of his contemporaries. Isabey was the most important miniature portrait painter at the court of Napoleon, and the 1796 date places this in his most productive period, when he was producing the precisely observed, elegantly composed miniature portraits that are his most accomplished works.
Cultural Impact
Jacques Luc Barbier-Valbonne is important in the history of French portrait painting because it demonstrates the precisely observed, elegantly composed manner that Isabey brought to portraiture as one of the most accomplished portrait painters of the French Neoclassical and Empire periods. Isabey's precisely observed, elegantly composed miniature portraits—combining the precise observation of the sitter with the elegant composition that is his most distinctive contribution—represent one of the most accomplished traditions in French portrait painting, and the 1796 portrait shows this tradition at its most precisely observed.
Why It Matters
Jacques Luc Barbier-Valbonne is Isabey's precisely observed Neoclassical portrait: the sitter rendered in the elegantly composed manner of the most important miniature portrait painter at the court of Napoleon. The 1796 portrait shows the combination of precise observation with elegant composition that makes Isabey one of the most accomplished portrait painters of the French Empire period.