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National Gallery of Art - THE COLLECTION
image of The Marquise de Pezay and the Marquise de Rougé with Her Two Sons
Elisabeth-Louise Vigée Le Brun (artist)
French, 1755 - 1842
The Marquise de Pezay and the Marquise de Rougé with Her Two Sons, 1787
oil on canvas
Overall: 123.4 x 155.9 cm (48 9/16 x 61 3/8 in.) framed: 177.8 x 203.2 x 19.1 cm (70 x 80 x 7 1/2 in.)
Gift of the Bay Foundation in memory of Josephine Bay Paul and Ambassador Charles Ulrick Bay
1964.11.1
From the Tour: 18th- and 19th-Century France — Neoclassicism
Object 2 of 7

Madame Vigée-Lebrun was part of the world she painted and, like her aristocratic patrons, was under threat of the guillotine after the revolution. She was forced to flee Paris in disguise in 1789. She had been first painter to Queen Marie-Antoinette and her personal confidant. The queen had intervened to ensure her election to the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture, an honor accorded few women.

More than two-thirds of Vigée-Lebrun's surviving paintings are portraits. Most, like this one, are of women and children who are idealized —flattered—into a kind of family resemblance. These unrelated young women, for example, could easily be mistaken for sisters. Their garments, airy silks and iridescent taffetas, are almost more individual than their faces, although both women were friends of the artist. The picture was hailed as a tribute to friendship and maternal love when it was shown at the Salon of 1787.

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