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Work The Skate
Department of Paintings: French painting
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The Skate
© 2010 Musée du Louvre / Angèle Dequier
Paintings
French painting
This early masterpiece by Chardin was immediately judged worthy of the finest Flemish examples (Snyders, Flyt). In The Skate, “this strange monster”, Proust admired “the beauty of its vast and delicate structure, tinted with red blood, blue nerves and white muscles, like the nave of a polychromatic cathedral”.
A "false" still life
Placed in contrast to the cauldron and pitcher — inert accessories at the right — to the left appears the tense and strange figure of a kitten, fur raised, seemingly frightened by a scene taking place outside of the painting. The skinned skate, evocative of Rembrandt’s Slaughtered Ox, with the odd assortment of objects arranged around it, was a source of astonishment to all painters — even as far as Matisse — for the riveting power of the animal’s vacant and ghostly gaze. The realism of the different elements of this false still life has forever served as a model to artists.
A reception piece
Chardin’s reception piece to the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture in 1728, The Skate, with its companion piece The Buffet, marks the beginning of the artist’s professional career. The painting remained in the collections of the Academy, before entering, during the French Revolution in 1793, the Muséum Central des Arts, which would later become the Louvre.
Technical description
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Jean-Baptiste Siméon CHARDIN
The Skate
c. 1725-1726
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Oil on canvas
H. 1.145 m; W. 1.46 m
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Académie Collection
INV. 3197
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Sully wing
2nd floor
The painters of Louis XV
Room 38
Practical information
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