Extensive landscape prospect with a fortified building on hill in the background (recto); Study of a landscape and a female figure (verso)
Antoine Chintreuil, mid-19th century
About this artwork
Antoine Chintreuil'sExtensive landscape prospect with a building on hill in the* (recto) and *Study of a landscape and female figure* (vers) is a delicate mid-19th-century watercolor sketch, measuring just 6 x 9 3/16 inches. Created on both sides of a single sheet, it captures the artist's keen eye for expansive natural vistas dominated by rolling hills and a distant fortified structure—evoking the romantic allure of rural France. The verso adds an intimate study of a landscape with a female figure, blending topography and human presence in fluid, translucent strokes. Chintreuil, a French artist aligned with the Barbizon school, championed realistic landscapes inspired by direct observation of nature, bridging Romanticism and emerging Impressionism. Watercolor's portability suited his plein-air practice, allowing quick notations of light and atmosphere on small-scale supports like this one. These studies highlight his technique of layering washes to suggest depth and mood, a hallmark of 19th-century draftsmanship. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Drawings and Prints department since a 1969 gift, this work offers a window into an artist's preparatory process, revealing how such modest sketches informed larger oil paintings that celebrated France's pastoral heritage amid rapid industrialization. (198 words)