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Benevolent Women on Horseback Visiting a Village

Jean Honoré Fragonard French

Not on view

In this bold and energetic drawing, Fragonard put down his first ideas for a composition that he later treated in a more finished and detailed version. He incised the contours of the main forms, presumably as a means to transfer the design to another sheet of paper. Like Reading in the Kitchen (ca. 1775–80), this scene alludes to the concept of altruism as the cornerstone of a just and harmonious society. Fashionable women on horseback, understood to be on a charitable mission, pass a family of villagers seated beneath a tree. Both parents look up and make signs of gratitude: the father by lifting his hat and the mother by gesturing toward her children.

Benevolent Women on Horseback Visiting a Village, Jean Honoré Fragonard (French, Grasse 1732–1806 Paris), Black chalk, incised

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