Study for Day (Truth)

Description

The artist’s wife, Berthe Jacques, served as the model for this preliminary study for the Art Institute’s painting Day (Truth). Hodler would often have his models pose behind a wooden frame with a grid of threads stretched across it—a method first described by the artist Albrecht Dürer in the 16th century. This allowed Hodler to accurately check the subject’s proportions and measurements against the drawing, which was also outlined with a grid.

Study for Day (Truth)

Ferdinand Hodler

1896/98

Accession Number

182642

Medium

Graphite with smudging on cream wove paper, squared for transfer

Dimensions

28.6 × 28.6 cm (11 5/16 × 11 5/16 in.)

Classification

graphite

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Print and Drawing Fund