The Grape Gatherer

Jean Honoré Fragonard French, 1732-1806
On View

in

Fashionable Living: Kanzler Room, Level 3, South Wing

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About the Artwork

Bathed in the light of the summer sunshine, a woman gathers grapes in her skirt. She looks down tenderly at a small child entangled in the folds of her clothing, while she teasingly squeezes grape juice on the infant lying before her. One of a set of four paintings all owned by the Detroit Institute of Arts, The Grape Gatherer is an early work by Jean-Honoré Fragonard, who would go on to become one of the most technically daring painters of the French eighteenth century. This composition highlights the playfulness that characterizes many of his later works. The series evokes the progression of the seasons, from the cultivation of a springtime garden to late summer’s grape harvest to autumn’s impending chill. The paintings were originally intended to adorn the walls of an ornate decorative interior.

The Grape Gatherer

between 1754 and 1755

Jean Honoré Fragonard

1732-1806

French

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Oil on canvas

Unframed: 59 1/8 × 33 3/4 inches (150.2 × 85.7 cm) Framed: 64 5/8 × 39 1/2 × 3 3/4 inches (164.1 × 100.3 × 9.5 cm)

Paintings

European Painting

Founders Society Purchase, Mr. and Mrs. Horace E. Dodge Memorial Fund

71.391

Public Domain

Markings

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Provenance

possibly 18th century, (Hôtel de Mortemart-Rochechouart, Paris, France);
possibly private collection (northern France);
Baron Roger Portalis (Paris, France);
by 1907, Eugen Kraemer [sic] (Paris, France);
May 5-6, 1913, Eugène Kraemer [sic] sale (Paris, France) lot 34;
by 1914, (Wildenstein with E. Gimpel, New York, New York, USA);
Judge Elbert H. Gary [d. 1927] (New York, New York, USA);
(Duveen Brothers, New York, New York, USA);
acquired by Anna Thomson Dodge (Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan, USA);
June 25, 1971, sold by (Christie's, London, England) lot 7;
1971-present, purchase by the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)

For more information on provenance, please visit:

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Exhibition History

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The exhibition history of a number of objects in our collection only begins after their acquisition by the museum, and may reflect an incomplete record.

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Published References

Portalis, Baron R. Scènes de la vie champêtre. Paris, 1902, p. 23.

Foster, J.J., ed. French Art from Watteau to Prud'hon. London, 1905-07, vol. 3, p. 46.

Chardin-Fragonard. Exh. cat., Galerie Georges Petit. Paris, 1907, nos. 113-116.

Dayot, A. and L. Vaillat. L'oeuvre de J.-B.-S. Chardin et de J.-H. Fragonard. Paris, 1907, no. 136, pp. 134-137.

Frantz, H. "The Chardin-Fragonard Exhibition." The International Studio 33 (1907-1908): p. 30 (ill.), pp. 25-35.

Fragonard. Exh. cat., E. Gimpel and Wildenstein and Co. New York, 1914, no. 25.

Apollinaire, G. Fragonard and the United States. Paris, 1914, pp. 14-21, p. 18 (ill.).

Mauclair, C. Un Tableau de Fragonard. Paris, p. 13.

"The Gary Fragonards." The American Art News 6 (December 8, 1917): p. 3.

Duveen, J. A Catalogue of Works of Art in the Collection of Anna Thomson Dodge, vol. 1. Detroit, 1939 (ill.).

Réau, L. Fragonard, sa vie et son oeuvre. Brussels, 1956, p. 172.

Wildenstein, G. The Paintings of Fragonard. London, 1960, p. 201, no. 37, p. 200 (fig. 26).

La Coste-Messelière, M.G. de. "Anatomie d'une vente publique." L'Oeil (May 1971): pp. 27, 30 (fig. 2).

"La chronique des arts." Gazette des Beaux-Arts 79 (January 1972): suppl., pp. 94-95 (fig. 335).

Wildenstein, D. and G. Mandel. L'opera completa di Fragonard. Milan, 1972, no. 34.

Bulletin of the DIA: Annual Report 51, no. 1 (1972): p. 14.

"Recent Accessions of American and Canadian Museums, October-December 1971." The Art Quarterly 35, no. 2 (1972): p. 200 (ill.), bottom no. 1.

Davidson, R. "Museum Accessions." Antiques Magazine (March 1973): p. 441 (ill.).

K.R. "Shorter Notices: Recent Museum Acquisitions." The Burlington Magazine 115, no. 843 (June 1973): p. 393.

Paris – New York: A Continuing Romance. Exh. cat., Wildenstein and Co. New York 1977, p. 48, no. 37 (fig. 45).

Darr, A.P. European Decorative Arts from Royal Collections. Exh. cat., University Liggett School. Grosse Pointe, 1981, p. 22 (ill.), (fig. 006).

Sutton, D. "Selected Prefaces: IX. Jean-Honoré Fragonard: The World as Illusion." Apollo 125, new series 300 (February 1987): p. 104, pp. 102-113.

Fragonard. Exh. cat., Grand Palais and Metropolitan Museum of Art. Paris and New York, 1987, pp. 40-45, cat. no. 3, p. 44 (ill.).

Cuzin, J.-P. Jean-Honoré Fragonard: Life and Work. New York, 1988, no. 12, pp. 28-30, 262 (ill.).

Rosenberg, P. Tout l'oeuvre peint de Fragonard. Paris, 1989, no. 31.

Sheriff, Mary D. Fragonard: Art and Eroticism. Chicago, 1990, pp. 95-113, 116 (ill.) p. 96 (fig. 15).

Three Masters of French Rococo: Boucher, Fragonard, Lancret. Exh. cat., Odakyu Grand Gallery, Daimaru Museum, Hakodate Museum of Art, Sogo Museum of Art. Tokyo, Umeda-Osaka, Hokkaido, and Yokohama, 1990, no. 31, p. 170 [English version], p. 147 [Japanese version], color pls. pp. 70-71.

Dell, T., et al. The Dodge Collection of Eighteenth-Century French and English Art at the Detroit Institute of Arts. New York and Detroit, 1996, no. 64, pp. 202-203, (ill.) p. 205.

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Catalogue Raisoneé

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Credit Line for Reproduction

Jean Honoré Fragonard, The Grape Gatherer, between 1754 and 1755, oil on canvas. Detroit Institute of Arts, Founders Society Purchase, Mr. and Mrs. Horace E. Dodge Memorial Fund, 71.391.

The Grape Gatherer
The Grape Gatherer