The Curious One

Description

Here a young man uses a ladder to climb over a garden wall. The sign at his right translates into "School for Young Ladies under the Direction of Mrs. Wachsam"—wachsam being the German word for "watchful." Apparently, overcome by curiosity, the man cannot resist his desire to see the young women concealed behind the wall. Scenes with amorous, sometimes voyeuristic overtones are common in the work of Mongin. The artist also seems fascinated with depicting the exact details of his settings. In 1824, a critic who saw The Curious One wrote that Mongin's paintings are "portraits of houses coated in plaster, garden trees, almost trivial details, and this pleases me greatly. Full of naiveté, this is what I need in a landscape, as in a representation of man's actions." The critic's comments clearly demonstrate his appreciation for Mongin's work, as well as the artist's belief in the inherent relationship between nature and man.

Provenance

Thomas Robinson, Providence.; His sale, New York, Moore's Art Galleries, 16-18 November 1886 (lot 184), Young Ladies' Institute, 17 x 12ž in., as by V. Bertin.; Wendell P. Colton.; Victor D. Spark, New York.; Bought by Mr. and Mrs. Noah L. Butkin, 20 November 1977. Given to the CMA in 1977.

The Curious One

Antoine Pierre Mongin

1823

Accession Number

1977.116

Medium

oil on paper mounted to canvas

Dimensions

Unframed: 43.5 x 34.6 cm (17 1/8 x 13 5/8 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Noah L. Butkin

Tags

Painting Neoclassical & Romantic (1751–1850) Oil Painting Canvas French

Background & Context

Background Story

Antoine Pierre Mongin (1769-1850) was a French painter known for the precisely observed, characterful genre paintings that make him one of the accomplished painters of the French genre tradition. The Curious One from 1823 depicts a curious figure in the precisely observed, characterful manner that distinguishes Mongin's best work from the more general genre painting of his contemporaries. Mongin was known for his precisely observed, characterful depictions of everyday life, and the 1823 date places this in the period when French genre painting was producing some of its most accomplished works, combining precise observation with characterful narrative detail.

Cultural Impact

The Curious One is important in the history of French genre painting because it demonstrates the precisely observed, characterful manner that Mongin brought to genre subjects as one of the accomplished painters of the French genre tradition. Mongin's precisely observed, characterful genre paintings—combining precise observation with the characterful narrative detail that is his most distinctive contribution—represent one of the accomplished traditions in French genre painting, and the 1823 painting shows this tradition at its most precisely observed and characterful.

Why It Matters

The Curious One is Mongin's precisely observed French genre painting: a curious figure rendered in the characterful manner of one of the accomplished painters of the French genre tradition. The 1823 painting shows the combination of precise observation with characterful narrative detail that makes French genre painting one of the accomplished traditions.