Study of a Woman’s Head
Jean-Baptiste Greuze, ca. 1780
About this artwork
Jean-Baptiste Greuze's *Study of a Woman’s* (ca. 1780) is a delicate oil sketch on wood panel, measuring 18½ x 16 inches, housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings department. Painted at the height of Greuze's career in pre-Revolutionary France, this intimate profile captures a woman's serene face in three-quarter view, showcasing his mastery of subtle expression and emotional depth. Greuze, a leading figure in the sentimental genre painting movement, bridged Rococo elegance with emerging Neoclassicism, often using such studies as preparatory works for larger moralistic scenes that tugged at the heartstrings of 18th-century audiences. The choice of oil on wood—a compact, durable medium favored for studio sketches—allowed Greuze to build rich layers of glazing for luminous skin tones and soft modeling, techniques that brought psychological realism to his subjects. Women in profile, as tagged here, evoked classical antiquity while highlighting contemporary ideals of beauty and virtue, making this piece a window into the salons where Greuze's dramatic, narrative-driven works gained fame. Acquired by the Met in 1871, this study exemplifies Greuze's influence on later Romantic portraiture, reminding visitors of how a simple head study could convey profound humanity amid the opulence of ancien régime France.