31 December: open from 10.00 to 15.00. 1 January: museum closed. 

This painting, a fête galante, recalls scenes from the Commedia dell’arte, a world to which Watteau was introduced in Paris by his master, Claude Guillot. Enveloped in a magical atmosphere, Pierrot sits at the centre of the composition, flanked by two men and two women, one of whom is playing the guitar. Like many seventeenth-century Italian landscapes, the scene is set in the corner of a garden; a statue of Pan can be discerned among the thick surrounding foliage. From an engraving made by Jeurat in 1728, we know that Watteau designed the painting with a horizontal format—it was cropped in the nineteenth century—and that he included two figures, Mezzetin or Scaramouche and Harlequin, peeping out at the group from among the trees. These figures and other details are no longer visible owing to defects in technique that have darkened this area of the canvas.

EA

18th Century18th Century - French paintingPaintingOilcanvas
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