The Child and the Bulldog

Marguerite Gérard French
After Jean Honoré Fragonard French

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 690

Artistic training was also a family affair in the household of the painter Fragonard. His wife, Marie Anne Gérard Fragonard (1745–1823), painted miniatures on ivory and his son Alexandre Evariste Fragonard (1780–1850) and sister-in-law Marguerite Gérard (1761–1837) both became artists.

In 1778, Fragonard embarked on a project teaching teenage Gérard to etch. The five prints she made over the course of the year were all modeled on wash drawings by Fragonard. In most cases, the subjects chosen were humorous or sentimental scenes of domestic life. Fragonard also returned to etching at this time, although his style and technique were distinctly his own.

The Child and the Bulldog, Marguerite Gérard (French, Grasse 1761–1837 Paris), Etching, second state of three

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