● On view now — Gallery 216
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Nicolas de Largillière was among the most highly esteemed and prolific portrait painters working in the time of Louis XIV of France, and his popularity continued through the period of the regency that followed Louis's death in 1715. His portraits were admired for their deftly rendered textures and for the confident poses that lent a sense of grandeur and ease to the sitters. They were sought after by a diverse clientele, ranging from royalty and courtiers to the upper middle class. In this work, one of his many self-portraits, Largillière presented himself as fashionably dressed and self-assured, the master of his art. He depicted himself as ready to lay out a painting, working with a porte-crayon (a piece of chalk in a holder) on the blank canvas behind him.
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Louis Tocqué — Jean Marc Nattier (1685–1766)
Johann Georg Wille — Portrait of Jean Baptiste Massé
French School — Portrait of an Artist
Maurice Quentin de Latour — Portrait of Madame Anne-Jeanne C
Carlo Lasinio — Portrait of Edouard Dagoty
Nicolas de Largillière (French, 1656–1746) — Portrait of Ann
Jean-Baptiste Perronneau — Olivier Journu (1724–1783)
B. Monmorency — Portrait of Pieter Parker, Alderman, Burgoma
Jean-Baptiste Greuze — Jean Jacques Caffiéri (1725–1792)
Jean-Baptiste Greuze — Charles Claude de Flahaut (1730–1809)
Carlo Lasinio|E. Heinsius — Portrait of Edouard Gautier-Dago
Maurice Quentin de Latour — Portrait of Jean-Joseph Cassanéa