The Fortune-Teller
Georges de La Tour, probably 1630s
About this artwork
Georges de La Tour'sThe Fortune Teller*, likely painted in the 1630s, is a captivating oil-on-canvas work from the French Baroque era, measuring 40 1/8 x 48 5/8 inches. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings department (acquired through the Rogers Fund in 0), it showcases La Tour's mastery ofoscuro—the dramatic interplay of light and shadow defines his style. As a leading artist of the Lorraine school, La Tour drew inspiration from Caravaggio, using subdued lighting to heighten emotional tension and realism in everyday scenes. This painting exemplifies 17th-century genre painting, a popular European tradition depicting ordinary life with subtle moral undertones. Featuring men and women in close interaction—evoking themes of chance, deception, or human folly—the composition draws viewers into an intimate, nocturnal moment illuminated by a single light source, a signature La Tour technique. Oil on canvas allowed for the rich textures and glowing highlights that make his figures emerge vividly from the darkness. A gem of Baroque artistry, *The Fortune Teller* invites reflection on fortune's unpredictability, blending historical realism with timeless intrigue for museum visitors today.