A Man Reading in a Garden (recto); Preliminary sketch for a Man Reading in a Garden (verso)
Honoré Daumier, ca. 1865
About this artwork
In Honoré Daumier's *A Man Reading in a Garden* (recto) with its preliminary sketch on the verso, created around 1865, we encounter a quiet moment of contemplation amid lush greenery. The French Realist artist, renowned for his sharp social caricatures and lithographic prowess, here captures an everyday bourgeois scene—a solitary man absorbed in reading. This double-sided sheet, measuring 13 5/16 x 10 5/8 inches, reflects Daumier's shift in later years toward intimate, humanistic studies, influenced by his failing eyesight and a deepening interest in ordinary life's poetry. The recto dazzles with layered techniques: watercolor over black chalk, enriched by pen and ink, brush and wash, and lithographic crayon for rich tonal depth and texture. The verso, in pen and brown ink with black-gray wash and crayon, reveals Daumier's preparatory process—fluid lines sketching the composition's essence. These mixed media highlight his mastery of drawing as both planning tool and finished work, bridging his satirical printmaking roots with painterly expression. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's H. O. Havemeyer Collection, this piece exemplifies 19th-century French draftsmanship's versatility, inviting viewers to savor the tranquility of reading in nature—a subtle counterpoint to Daumier's often biting social commentary.