Born in Sainte-Anne, Guadeloupe, in 1760, Guillaume Guillon-Lethière was the illegitimate child of a king's prosecutor and a freed black slave. After displaying a youthful aptitude for draftsmanship, he moved to Paris at the age of fourteen and eventually established himself as a formidable history painter. After securing influential allies, such as Lucien Bonaparte, he was appointed director of the French Academy in Rome. Ingres was beginning his second year as a pensionnaire when Lethière arrived in October 1807. From 1808 to 1818, Ingres executed no fewer than ten portraits of Lethière, including this virtuoso sheet depicting the middle-aged director in all of his convivial pomposity.
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
(1780–1867)
Portrait of Guillaume Guillon-Lethière
1815
Pencil on wove paper
11 x 8 3/4 inches (280 x 221 mm)
Bequest of Therese Kuhn Straus in memory of her husband, Herbert N. Straus, 1977
1977.56
Bequest of Therese Kuhn Straus in memory of her husband, Herbert N. Straus, 1977