Reclining River God
Jean-Baptiste Greuze, n.d.
About this artwork
Jean-Baptiste Greuze's *Reclining River God a masterful red chalk drawing from the late 18th century, the sensual form of a mythological male nude lounging in classical repose. Rendered with framing lines in pen and brown, this large-scale sheet (18 7/16 x 24 7/8 in.) exemplifies Greuze's skill in figure studies, likely created as a preparatory work or independent académie. The soft, warm tones of red chalk—known as sanguine—allow for exquisite modeling of the figure's musculature and flowing contours, evoking the vitality of ancient river deities from Greco-Roman mythology. Greuze, a prominent French artist bridging Rococo sentimentality and emerging Neoclassicism, was renowned for his dramatic genre scenes and moralistic paintings, but his drawings reveal a deeper commitment to anatomical precision and expressive nudity. Male nudes like this one were staples of artistic training in the French Academy, serving as vehicles for mastering light, shadow, and human anatomy. Acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1960 through the Joseph Pulitzer Bequest, this work highlights Greuze's technical prowess and his fascination with antiquity, offering visitors a window into the preparatory artistry behind grand historical paintings. Today, it stands as a testament to the enduring allure of the nude in Western art, blending eroticism with idealized beauty in a medium prized for its intimacy and immediacy.