
Cortlandt Field Bishop (1870-1935)
Historical Context
William-Adolphe Bouguereau was the supreme academic painter of late nineteenth-century France, celebrated for his technical perfection and his idealized treatments of mythological and religious subjects. This 1873 work depicting Cortlandt Field Bishop — identified as a child portrait of the future sportsman and collector — is an unusual subject in his output, which more typically featured allegorical nudes, madonnas, and peasant girls. Child portraiture allowed Bouguereau to combine his virtuoso technical command with an intimate subject, applying his enamel-like finish to the specific features of a named individual. The New York Historical Society holds this as evidence of his transatlantic American patronage, which was substantial throughout his career.
Technical Analysis
Bouguereau's technique is famously seamless — smooth, porcelain-like surfaces built from precise drawing and controlled tonal modelling with no visible brushwork. The child's face would be rendered with idealized softness while maintaining sufficient likeness to satisfy the family. His palette for child portraits is typically warm and luminous.

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