The Palette Game
Painting by Jean-Honoré Fragornard
The Palette Game (French - Le Jeu de la palette) is a c.1761-1765 oil on canvas painting by Jean-Honoré Fragonard, showing an idyll with a happy company in a natural landscape dominated by ruins.[1] It and The See-Saw were rediscovered in a château in Orne in 2016, after which they were both declared national treasures of France then acquired for the Louvre, which placed them on long-term loan to the Musée Fabre in Montpellier in 2021.[2]
See also
References
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- Blind Man's Buff (c. 1750)
- The See-Saw (Madrid; c. 1750–1752)
- Jeroboam Sacrificing to Idols (1752)
- Psyche Showing Her Sisters Her Gifts from Cupid (1753)
- The Birth of Venus (c. 1753)
- The Storm (c. 1759)
- The Palette Game (c. 1761–1765)
- The See-Saw (Louvre; c. 1761–1765)
- Coresus Sacrificing Himself to Save Callirhoe (1765)
- The Swing (c. 1767)
- Fantastical Portraits (1769)
- Jean-Claude Richard, Abbot of Saint-Non, Dressed à l'Espagnole (c. 1769)
- The Woman With A Dog (1769)
- The New Model (c. 1770)
- A Young Girl Reading (c. 1770)
- The Music Lesson (c. 1770)
- The Raised Chemise (c. 1770)
- Adoration of the Shepherds (1775)
- The Visit to the Nursery (1775)
- Blind Man's Buff (1775-1780)
- The Bolt (1777)
- The Stolen Kiss (c. 1780)
- Marie-Anne Fragonard (wife)
- Alexandre-Évariste Fragonard (son)
- Marguerite Gérard (sister-in-law)
- Rococo
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