Image


Adèle Romany
Description
Maker
- Adèle Romany, 1769-1846, French
Title
Year
Medium
Materials/Techniques
Dimensions
Signature / Inscription / Marks
signed lower right on stone ledge: "Adèle R x x x" There is a faint mark to the left of the signature, possiblly indicating the letter M in "Mme" An earlier suggestion that the signature is "A de la R x x x" does not note the apparent accent grave over the first letter "è"
Type
Credit
Purchased with the Edith C. Erlenmeyer Bequest and the Helen M. Danforth Acquisition Fund
Object Number
About
The subject of this portrait, Auguste Vestris (1760–1842), was the son of King Louis XVI’s dancing master. He made his ballet debut at the age of twelve and soon usurped his father’s reputation as “the god of the dance.” This portrait celebrates the dancer’s slender form and catalogues his taste for fashionable dress. A close-fitting wool jacket, beaver-fur hat, voluminous cravat, silk waistcoat, golden earrings, bamboo walking stick, and yellow gloves complete the look of a “dandy.” The artist, Adèle Romany, trained in Paris in a segregated studio for women. She sent her first contribution to the Paris Salon in 1793, the year she painted Vestris, and over the course of a long career became known for her portraits of actors and musicians associated with the Comédie-Française. In this spirited representation of the dancer, she demonstrates skillful drawing and modeling, a refined sense of color, and a talent for lively characterization.
signed lower right on stone ledge: "Adèle R x x x" There is a faint mark to the left of the signature, possiblly indicating the letter M in "Mme" An earlier suggestion that the signature is "A de la R x x x" does not note the apparent accent grave over the first letter "è"