Allegory of Earth
Charles Le Brun, ca. 1660
About this artwork
Charles Le Brun's *Allegory of Earth* (ca. 1660) is a captivating preparatory drawing from the height of France's Grand Siècle under Louis XIV. As the influential first painter to the king and director of the Académie Royale, Le Brun mastered allegorical imagery to embody royal power and cosmic order. This work personifies Earth through dynamic figures—including a nude female, robust men, a cornucopia symbolizing abundance, and fierce lions evoking strength—reflecting the Baroque era's fascination with elemental forces and classical mythology. Executed in brush and gray wash over red chalk, with precise framing lines in pen and brown ink, the drawing showcases Le Brun's virtuoso technique. Red chalk provides a warm underdrawing for contours and modeling, while fluid gray washes add dramatic depth and luminosity, techniques ideal for studies destined for larger paintings or tapestries at Versailles. At 11 7/8 x 8 1/4 inches, its compact scale belies its monumental ambition. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Drawings and Prints department (Rogers Fund, 1964), this piece highlights Le Brun's role in shaping French classicism, blending Italianate drama with disciplined French elegance. Visitors will appreciate how such sketches fueled the opulent decorations that defined an absolute monarchy's visual language.