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Un lièvre et un gigot de mouton (A Hare and a Leg of Lamb)
Artist Jean-Baptiste Oudry
Year1742
Medium Oil on canvas
Movement Rococo
Dimensions98.2 cm × 73.5 cm (38.7 in × 28.9 in)
Location Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio [1]

A Hare and a Leg of Lamb ( French: Un lièvre et un gigot de mouton) is a 1742 painting by French Rococo painter and engraver Jean-Baptiste Oudry. [2] [3]

Description

The painting employs a trompe-l'œil technique and shows a skinned leg of lamb behind a dead hare, depicted with its eye open and a single drop of blood hanging from the end of its nose. The hare and the leg of lamb are nailed together to a wall. [4] [5]

Oudry was known for his canvases featuring dead game, and A Hare and a Leg of Lamb has been described as, "uncannily real." [6] Others have criticized the canvas as, "lifeless and inert...both highly contrived and utterly dead." [4]

The painting was originally commissioned to be hung in a dining room. [7]

References

  1. ^ Chong, Alan (1993). European & American Painting in the Cleveland Museum of Art: A Summary Catalogue. Cleveland, OH: Cleveland Museum of Art. ISBN  9780940717213.
  2. ^ Carey, Jean Marie (2014). "The Cry of Nature: Art and the Making of Animal Rights by Stephen F. Eisenman". Sehepunkte Journal for Geschichtswissenschaften. 14 (7/8): 1–3.
  3. ^ Edwards, Michael (2016). "The Economy of Still Life: A Practice-Led Exploration of Still-Life Painting". doi: 10.25911/5d70ef141f5e4. Retrieved 25 June 2018. {{ cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= ( help)
  4. ^ a b Eisenman, Stephen F. (2013). The Cry of Nature: Art and the Making of Animal Rights. London, UK: Reaktion Books, Ltd. p. 91. ISBN  9781780231952.
  5. ^ Lajer-Burcharth, Ewa (2018). The Painter's Touch. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. p. 115. ISBN  9780691170121.
  6. ^ Carnegie, Volume 69, Part 2 – Volume 70, Part 2006. Pittsburgh, PA: Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh. 2005.
  7. ^ "Jean-Baptiste Oudry A Hare and a Leg of Lamb 1742". Retrieved 9 July 2018.