Landscape with Shepherds and Flock of Sheep (c. 1763-65) by Jean-Honoré FragonardThe National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo
'Fragonard was one of the major painters in 18th century France, and he was renowned for his genre scenes and decorative paintings filled with the light loveliness of Rococo sweetness.'
Ruins of an Imperial Palace, Rome (1759) by Jean-Honoré FragonardThe J. Paul Getty Museum
'As a student at the Académie de France in Rome, Jean-Honoré Fragonard was encouraged to sketch Roman sites in the open air. In this view of the Palatine Hill's northeast corner, a site also sketched by his friend Hubert Robert and by François Boucher, Fragonard created a powerful visual momentum by coordinating the forward thrust of the corner of the palace, the brilliant sunlight, and the towering cypresses.'
The Pond (c. 1761–65) by Jean-Honoré FragonardKimbell Art Museum
'Fragonard was the last and perhaps the greatest of the French Rococo painters.'
Jean-Claude Richard, Abbot of Saint-Non, Dressed 'a l'Espagnole' (Around 1769) by Jean-Honoré FragonardMuseu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya - MNAC, Barcelona
'Fragonard was one of the last representatives of rococo art and this work shows his most characteristic style: touches of light material known as 'virtuosity of speed'.'
Young Girl Reading (c. 1769) by Jean Honoré FragonardNational Gallery of Art, Washington DC
'Perhaps more than the work of his two teachers, Boucher and Chardin, Jean-Honoré Fragonard's bravura handling of brushwork and color embodies eighteenth-century painting aesthetics.'
Young Woman (c.1769) by Fragonard, Jean-HonoréDulwich Picture Gallery
'The fluid brushwork and thick impasto of the girl's theatrical 'Spanish' costume identifies this work as one of Fragonard's Figures de Fantaisie, a series of imaginary figures painted to demonstrate his remarkable range of technique. By forging Grimou's signature, a painter who was himself known as a copyist and extremely popular at the time, Fragonard was not trying to create a forgery but rather a playful tease to challenge the viewer to uncover the true author.'
Study for the Pursuit Panel, now in Fragonard Room, Frick Collection, New York (1771/1771) by Jean-Honoré FragonardThe Frick Pittsburgh
'This small work is a study for Fragonard's painting "The Pursuit," one of four wall-sized panels that form "The Progress of Love," now in The Frick Collection, New York. Fragonard was commissioned by Madame DuBarry, Louis XV's mistress to paint four large canvases for the Château de Louveciennes, near Versailles.'
Oh! If Only He Were as Faithful to Me (about 1770–1775) by Jean-Honoré FragonardThe J. Paul Getty Museum
'Fragonard's light, fluent washes also work to convey a sense of abandonment, evident especially in the wildly tossed-about bedclothes.'
The Intimate Conversation (circa 1778 - 1780) by Jean Honoré FragonardMuseum Boijmans Van Beuningen
'The women are probably Marie-Anne Gérard, who married Fragonard in 1769, and her younger sister Marguerite, Fragonard's pupil.'
The Letter or The Spanish Conversation (About 1778) by Jean-Honoré Fragonard (French, 1732–1806)The Art Institute of Chicago
'Jean-Honoré Fragonard's highly personal, powerful style emerged after periods of study with both François Boucher and Jean-Siméon Chardin, and over five years at the Académie de France in Rome.'
The Fountain of Love (about 1785) by Jean-Honoré FragonardThe J. Paul Getty Museum
'With this version, Jean-Honoré Fragonard returned the allegory to its classical origins and imbued it with the thrilling rush of those first beguiling moments of love. The quintessential Rococo artist, Fragonard responded to the Neoclassical movement in an extremely inventive manner, adding a soft, steamy atmosphere to his cameo-like figures.'