Allegory of Vigilance
Jean Honoré Fragonard, ca. 1772
About this artwork
Jean Honoré Fragonard's *Allegory of Vigilance (ca. 1772) is a captivating oil on canvas painting, measuring 27 1/8 x 21 5/8 inches in an intimate oval format. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings department, this exemplifies the artist's mastery of Rococo style, characterized by its playful elegance, soft lighting, and sensual forms. The composition likely features a female nude in profile, engaged in reading—a motif that blends introspection with allure, symbolizing vigilance as watchful awareness amid leisure. Created during the late Rococo period in 18th-century France, Fragonard's painting reflects the era's fascination with allegory, where everyday pleasures masked deeper moral or philosophical ideas. Oil on canvas allowed Fragonard to achieve luminous skin tones and fluid brushwork, evoking a sense of movement and intimacy typical of his oeuvre. The oval shape, popular for private commissions, enhances the work's decorative appeal, inviting viewers into a world of refined sensuality just before the shift to Neoclassicism. This gift to the Met in 1953 preserves Fragonard's legacy as a bridge between Baroque exuberance and emerging Enlightenment restraint, offering visitors a glimpse into the opulent tastes of French aristocracy.