Head of King Louis XV by François Lemoyne - about 1729 - 21 x 29.5 cm J. Paul Getty Museum Head of King Louis XV by François Lemoyne - about 1729 - 21 x 29.5 cm J. Paul Getty Museum

Head of King Louis XV

Black chalk and pastel on faded blue paper • 21 x 29.5 cm
  • François Lemoyne - 1688 - 4 June 1737 François Lemoyne about 1729

When François Le Moyne produced this pastel drawing of him, the French King Louis XV was only nineteen years old. Viewed from below, Louis poses informally without a wig, his hair left long and unpowdered. He gazes off into the distance, wearing a calm yet regal expression. Using fine strokes of black chalk, Le Moyne created the young king's gently curling hair. Delicate lines of pastel give soft highlights to his hair, eyes, nose, and slightly pursed lips. Darker shadows around the jaw line form Louis's round and fleshy chin. Le Moyne made this drawing as a preparatory study for the head of the king in an allegorical portrait, Louis XV Bestows Peace upon Europe. The work was commissioned in 1729 when the king was trying to build a central role for France as a peacemaker. The painting, which originally hung at the entrance to the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles, was as much a tool for propaganda as it was a portrait of the young ruler.