Halt of the Hunt

Carle (Charles André) Vanloo French

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 629

Hunting was an aristocratic activity regulated by the king, who often led large hunting expeditions several times a week. This elegant picnic taken mid-hunt derives from Antoine Watteau’s fêtes galantes, but teems with contemporary detail, including a Black, likely enslaved, servant dressed in exoticized costume. This oil sketch’s verve and freshness reflect its status as a study to prepare for a large, closely related painting that was installed in the paneling of Louis XV’s dining room at the Château de Fontainebleau in 1737.

Halt of the Hunt, Carle (Charles André) Vanloo (French, Nice 1705–1765 Paris), Oil on canvas

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