Four Ladies Sitting around a Table Occupied with Needlework, Reading, and Writing; verso: Study of a Woman with Needlework
Daniel Nikolaus Chodowiecki, 1758
About this artwork
In the intimate graphite drawing *Four Ladies Sitting around a Table Occupied with Needlework, Reading, and Writing* (1758), Daniel Nikolaus Chodowiecki captures serene moment of domestic life among middle-class women. Created when the artist was just 20, this small-scale work (4 3/4 x 1 15/16 in.) showcases four figures gathered at a table, absorbed in needlework, reading, and writing—activities that highlight the refined leisure and education of 18th-century European women. The verso features a quick study of a woman with needlework, revealing Chodowiecki's preparatory process. Chodowiecki, a leading German Rococo artist and illustrator active in Berlin, excelled in genre scenes that depicted everyday morality and social customs during the Enlightenment. His precise graphite technique—using fine lines and subtle shading—brings a lifelike intimacy to these vignettes, making them feel like glimpses into real homes. Such drawings often served as studies for his popular prints, disseminating bourgeois ideals of virtue, literacy, and domestic harmony across Europe. Today, housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Drawings and Prints department (Purchase, C. G. Boerner Gift, 2006), this double-sided gem offers a window into gender roles and cultural aspirations of the era, reminding us how art preserved the quiet rhythms of daily life.