● On view now — Gallery 218
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Jean-Antoine Houdon was one of the greatest sculptors of the 18th century, and he had a particular talent for portrait busts. Commissioned in 1780, one year after her first marriage, this bust of Louise de Domangeville presents the sitter as somewhat older than her 18 years. Houdon’s handling of the sculpture strikes a balance between the conversational intimacy of Rococo portraiture and the simplified dignity of Neoclassicism. The turn of the sitter’s head and the precisely cut pupils of her eyes focus her gaze, and Houdon conveyed skin, hair, and fabric through nuances of texture and polish. Her drapery frames the bust and imparts the illusion of Classical repose.
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Johann Gottfried Schadow — Queen Louise of Prussia
Jacques Philippe Joseph de Saint Quentin — Head of a Young W
Gainsborough Dupont (British, 1754–1797) — Portrait of Mary
Wedgwood Manufactory — Plaque with Portrait of Mrs. William
Charles-Nicolas Cochin (French, 1715–1790) — Half-length Por
Johan Teyler — Portret van een jonge vrouw
Johann Friedrich August Tischbein — Frederica Louisa Wilhelm
Johann Friedrich August Tischbein — Frederica Louisa Wilhelm
John Russell — Portrait of a Lady
Jean Honoré Fragonard — Portrait of a Young Woman
British School — Portrait of a Lady, Possibly of the Stanley
Charles Balthazar Julien Fevret de Saint-Mémin (French, 1770