Art News

The Morgan Library & Museum Presents Master Drawings by Ingres

artwork: Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres - "Odalisque and Slave", 1839 - Graphite, black and white chalk, gray and brown wash. Signed, inscribed, and dated at lower left, J. Ingres / Rom. 1839. - Thaw Collection, The Morgan Library & Museum. - Photo: Graham Haber, 2011.


NEW YORK, N.Y.- Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (1780–1867) is among an elite group of nineteenth-century French masters whose style is almost instantly recognizable. Arguably the greatest portraitist of his time, Ingres was a brilliant draftsman, and his drawings have long been prized along with his paintings. The Morgan Library & Museum presents sixteen superb drawings and three letters by Ingres from its collection, together with one exceptional loan, in a focused exhibition in the Clare Eddy Thaw Gallery. Running through November 27 the show spans Ingres’s career and provides visitors with an intimate look at a draftsman who is indisputably one of the greatest in French history.