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Portrait of Marie-Louise Joubert, neé Poulletier de Perigny (In frame)

François-Xavier Fabre

The J. Paul Getty Museum

The J. Paul Getty Museum
Los Angeles, United States

On August 24, 1785, Marie-Louise Poulletier de Perigny married the wealthy and cultured Laurent-Nicolas de Joubert. To commemorate the marriage, the Joubert family commissioned the young artist François-Xavier Fabre to make this portrait and its pendant.

Seated on a garden chair, Madame Joubert slightly inclines her head and gazes at the viewer under half-lidded eyes. In her hair she wears a wreath made of myrtle, which is sacred to Venus, the goddess of love. A golden sash ties underneath the white bodice of her purple silk dress, and her loosely curling hair falls casually down alongside her shoulders and arms. Her elegant hands are folded across her lap. The portrait achieves an uncomplicated effect, illustrating Fabre's use of the Neoclassical style that he learned from his teacher Jacques-Louis David.

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The J. Paul Getty Museum

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