Jean Jacques Caffiéri (1725–1792)
Jean-Baptiste Greuze, ca. 1765
About this artwork
This elegant oval portrait by Jean-Baptiste Greuze captures Jean Jacques Caffiéri1725–1792), a prominent figure in 18th-century France, painted around 1765. Greuze, a leading French artist transitioning from Rococo exuberance to the emerging Neoclassical emphasis on moral clarity and realism, specialized in intimate portraits and sentimental genre scenes. Here, in oil on canvas measuring 25¼ × 20¾ inches, he renders Caffiéri with a penetrating gaze and subtle modeling of features, highlighting the subject's dignified presence amid the opulent pre-Revolutionary era. The oval format, popular for formal portraits in the 18th century, lends an intimate, gem-like quality, framing Caffiéri as a man of intellect and refinement. Greuze's masterful use of soft lighting and textured brushwork—evident in the fall of fabric and skin tones—conveys psychological depth, a hallmark of his style that influenced later Romantic painters. Caffiéri, known through historical records as a skilled artisan, embodies the Enlightenment-era fusion of artistry and craftsmanship. Now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings department, thanks to the 1956 bequest of Ethel Tod Humphrys, this work offers visitors a window into the cultured world of Louis XV's France, where portraiture celebrated individual achievement.