Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Jean-François Millet executed this boldly drawn life-sized portrait at an early point in his career when he had very little money and his paintings would not sell. Another artist had suggested he make drawings to trade for clothing, and this example belongs to a group of four chalk portraits of artist colleagues that Millet sold together for only twenty French francs (about three dollars). The sitter, Narcisse Virgile Diaz de la Peña, became known for his thickly painted, luminous and colorful landscapes. In this impressively large portrait of Diaz, Millet used the black chalk in a broad yet accurate manner to describe the sitter's curly hair, bushy beard, and brows. A few touches of light-colored chalk provide a highlight on the collar, and the shadow across part of the face adds expression to Diaz's slightly furrowed brow and direct gaze.
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Adrien Nargeot (French, 1837-) — Gavarni
George Cruikshank — Self-Portrait
Gustave Le Gray — Portrait de Pitre-Chevalier
Georges Gorvel (French, 1866–1938) — Portrait of Charles Dic
Odilon Redon — Paul Sérusier
Nicolaas Pieneman — Portrait of Charles Henri Joseph Leicker
Anonymous, French, 19th century — Portrait of Merle
Paul Gavarni (French, 1804–1866) — Self-Portrait
Félix Bracquemond|Zacharie Astruc — Portrait of Zacharie Ast
Henri Lehmann — Portrait of Anton Heinrich Springer (1825–18
William Rothenstein (British, 1872–1945) — George Milner
Gustave Moreau — Portrait of Eugène Lacheurié