This child's portrait, as well as those of her parents, shows Ingres' closeness to Raphael and the Florentine painters prior to his departure for Italy. When they were shown at the 1806 salon, they were labeled "Gothic" because of their linear precision and enamel-like finish, in the manner of the "primitives".
Ingres' three-quarter length portrait of a rather slightly-built adolescent against an Île-de-France landscape exudes great freshness. The young woman's gaze is candid and her mousseline dress a virginal white, but her full lips, ermine boa and elbow gloves all evoke female sensuality. Ingres imbues this portrait of an adolescent, the only one he painted, with all the sensuality of his portraits of adult women.
Ingres' portrait of Mademoiselle Rivière, along with those of her parents, form a kind of triptych. They were painted in Paris in 1806, just before he left for Rome. Ingres, who aspired to be a history painter, earned his livelihood painting portraits, especially at this point in his career. This portrait and that of Mme Rivière were shown at the 1806 Salon along with "Portrait of Napoleon on the Imperial Throne" (Musée de l'Armée, Paris). Critics reproached the picture's "Gothicness", drawing a parallel between Ingres' style and that of primitives such as Van Eyck, who were only then being discovered. Ingres, although hurt by these criticisms, was still determined to become the artistic "revolutionary" he envisaged in his writings.
The girl's pose is reminiscent of Raphael, whom Ingres revered. The characteristics of the drawing, however, unconcerned with anatomical accuracy, are all Ingres' own. Caroline Rivière's neck is very elongated, and the bridge of her nose flows uninterrupted into the brow, forming a strange curve. Unlike the abstraction of the contours, the treatment of the clothes is illusionist. The color of this portrait is also remarkable. The picture's overall clarity is enhanced by the model's ebony black hair and mustard brown gloves.
The portrait of Mademoiselle Caroline Rivière was painted in 1806[1] by the French Neoclassical artist Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, and today hangs in the Louvre. It is the third of three portraits of the Rivière family the artist painted that year. Caroline's father, Philibert Rivière, was a successful court official under Napoleon's empire, and sought to commemorate himself, his wife and daughter through a commission with the then young and rising artist - his portraits of Philibert and his wife are also still extant.[2] Although Ingres favoured subject matter drawn from history or Greek legend, at this early stage in his career he earned his living mainly through commissions from wealthy patrons.[1] The family lived outside Paris, at St. Germain-en-Laye, and Mademoiselle Caroline Rivière would have been between 13 and 15 at the time she was portrayed; according to Ingres the "ravishing daughter".[3]
The younger Rivière's portrait describes slightly-built and youthful femininity and hints at a hesitant openness. The painting is rendered in bright hues and set against a serene white–blue early spring landscape, the freshness of which was intended to reflect the youth of the sitter. The background is not deeply portrayed; the perspective is shallow and rises—according to the art historian Robert Rosenblum—in "flattened horizontal tiers against which the figure seems crisply silhouetted as if in low relief."[3]
Typical of portraits by Ingres of the time, Caroline Rivière is drawn with a disregard for anatomical accuracy. Her neck is overly elongated, and the bridge of her nose extends too far.[1] Rivière is portrayed with a stiffness and awkwardness typical of her age, and shown in a manner which was intended to emphasise a sense of the nascent purity and simplicity of her youth. Yet the painting is generally seen in the light of pathos and tragedy, as the sitter died within a year of the work being completed.[1][4]
It was, along with Ingres's two other portrayals of the family, exhibited in the 1806 Salon, but was poorly received for its perceived "Gothicness" (due to its precision of line and enamel finish) and its similarity to Jan van Eyck and other artists of Early Netherlandish painting (in French "Les Primitifs Flamands") who at the time were only just being rediscovered.[1] Further, the manner in which the whiteness of the sitter's dress contrasts with the curve of her boa offended some viewers.[5] Today the painting is typically seen as a peak in Ingres's artistic career,[6] and in this work Ingres introduces an emotional link between figurative and landscape art, and the watery scape behind the sitter evokes rhythms with many of the visual themes presented in the rich imagery of the foreground.[3]
In 2003, the art critic Jonathan Jones remarked of the painting,
The sexuality Ingres usually reserved for harem fantasies slips over into the real and respectable world in this charged portrait. His obviously intense visual relationship with his subject and his contentment to look, with a clinical waxy fetishism, at Mademoiselle Rivière's full lips, bared neck, long gloves and spectacularly serpentine boa, lend this picture drama."[5]
Mademoiselle Caroline Rivière was bequeathed to the Louvre in 1870 by Caroline Rivière's sister-in-law
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mademoiselle_Caroline_Rivi%C3%A8re