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| Black crayon, heightened with white gouache (32 x 24 cm) Sgn. At lower right Isabey | 
.jpg) Isabey was a personal friend of Robert's. He recorded meeting him for the first time at Versailles in 1787: "From that time dates my intimacy with Robert, painter of landscape, man of talent and resources".  He later worked under him at the château de Beauregard.  In 1798 Isabey was granted lodgings at the Louvre and became Robert's neighbour, so the portrait presumably dates from about that time.  It may be compared with two earlier likenesses of a younger, more powerful-looking Robert exhibited at the Salon of 1789 - the portrait by  Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun in the Louvre (left) and a sculpture by Pajou.
Isabey was a personal friend of Robert's. He recorded meeting him for the first time at Versailles in 1787: "From that time dates my intimacy with Robert, painter of landscape, man of talent and resources".  He later worked under him at the château de Beauregard.  In 1798 Isabey was granted lodgings at the Louvre and became Robert's neighbour, so the portrait presumably dates from about that time.  It may be compared with two earlier likenesses of a younger, more powerful-looking Robert exhibited at the Salon of 1789 - the portrait by  Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun in the Louvre (left) and a sculpture by Pajou.Reference
"Jean-Baptiste Isabey, Portrait of Hubert Robert". Eighteenth-century French Drawings in New York Collections. Metropolitan Museum of Art (1999) No.97. p.224-5
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=1pnGSWQcjfgC&dq=&pg=RA1-PA224
Here is another example from the National Gallery of Art, Washington:
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| Black chalk and stumping, heightened with white gouache (32 x 24 cm) Gift of John Morton Morris, 2000. Wrapped round a drawing block prepared by Niodot fils http://www.nga.gov/content/ngaweb/Collection/art-object-page.116285.html | 

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