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Unmounted fancy dark grey-yellowish green diamond

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Unmounted fancy dark grey-yellowish green diamond. Photo Sotheby's.

The step-cut fancy dark grey-yellowish green diamond weighing 63.83 carats, fitted case. Estimation 405,000 — 625,000 CHF

Accompanied by GIA report no. 5151695705, stating that the diamond is Fancy Dark Gray-Yellowish Green, Natural Colour, together with an appendix letter expressing the rarity of this diamond.

"This color is described in the GIA Fancy Colored Grading system as Fancy Dark Gray-Yellowish Green. An outstanding feature of this diamond is the inclusion which is eye-visible and nicely framed through the table facet. This pattern is also observable from the pavilion. The inclusion has a six-fold symmetry and is related to the presence of hydrogen-related submicron cloud inclusions in the diamond. The oriented cloud has a flower pattern. Gem diamond with such a distinct symmetry of a cloud is very rare, and its positioning within the polished diamond through the table gives it an overall dramatic appearance," letter from the GIA, 3 October 2013.

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels and Noble Jewels, Genève, 13 mai 2014 - http://www.sothebys.com/


A pair of blue and white oval dishes, Qianlong

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A pair of blue and white oval dishes, Qianlong. Photo Bonhams.

Each with a flat rim with bracket moulded edge, the central well painted with a pastoral scene with a farm boy, accompanied by two deer and two cranes in flight, all surrounded by a flower head, scrolling ribbon and diaper border. Each 38cm (15in) wide (2). Estimate£3,000 - 5,000 €3,700 - 6,100

Bonhams. ASIAN ART, London, Knightsbridge, 12 May 2014 - http://www.bonhams.com/

Pair of important diamond pendants

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Pair of important diamond pendants. Photo Sotheby's.

Each claw-set with a pear-shaped diamond weighing 10.22 and 10.01 carats. Estimation 1,340,000 — 2,230,000 CHF 

Accompanied by GIA report no. 2155830050 and no. 2155830073, stating that the diamonds are both D Colour, Internally Flawless and VVS1 Clarity respectively, together with a working diagram stating that the 10.01 carat diamond may be internally flawless after repolishing.

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels and Noble Jewels, Genève, 13 mai 2014 -http://www.sothebys.com/

A pair of export blue and white soft-paste porcelain mythological-subject serving dishes, Qianlong, c.1750-70

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A pair of export blue and white soft-paste porcelain mythological-subject serving dishes, Qianlong, c.1750-70. Photo Bonhams.

Painted after a drawing by Frederick Bloemaert, depicting Neptune holding a trident and riding on dolphins, amongst tritons and nymphs, the wells decorated with leafy peony and chrysanthemum branches within cell pattern borders, the flattened rims with foaming waves, the exteriors with moulded shell motif feet, bordering further flowering stems. 31.2cm (12.1/4in) wide. Estimate£4,000 - 5,000 (€4,900 - 6,100)

The original source for this design was identified by Le Corbeiller as an etching called 'The Realm of Neptune' by Frederick Bloemaert (c.1610-c.1669), after a drawing by his father Abraham Bloemaert. This is a Baroque design executed in blue and white on both fine grained and soft paste porcelain. 

For a dish of this design see 'Chinese Ceramics in the Collection of the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam', Christiaan J.A Jorg, p.277, pl.321. The author states that the depiction of Neptune occurs in several varieties of 'Chine de commande' from c.1740 onwards.

Bonhams. ASIAN ART, London, Knightsbridge, 12 May 2014http://www.bonhams.com/

Diamond necklace, late 19th century

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Diamond necklace, late 19th century. Photo Sotheby's.
Designed as a graduating row of lanceolated motifs, set with cushion-shaped, circular-cut and rose diamonds, length approximately 380mm, may be worn as a tiara with the provided fitting. Estimation 220,000 — 245,000 CHF 

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels and Noble Jewels, Genève, 13 mai 2014 -http://www.sothebys.com/

First exhibition in Britain to explore the role of architecture in Italian Renaissance painting opens

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Carlo Crivelli, Annunciation with St Emidius, 1486. Oil on wood transferred to canvas, 207 x 146,5 cm, © The National Gallery, London

LONDON.- This spring, the National Gallery presents the first exhibition in Britain to explore the role of architecture in Italian Renaissance painting of the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries. 

'Building the Picture: Architecture in Italian Renaissance Painting' aims to increase visitors' appreciation and understanding of some of the most beautiful and architectonic paintings by Italian masters such as Duccio, Botticelli, Crivelli and their contemporaries. Visitors will be encouraged to look in new ways at buildings depicted in paintings, and to investigate how artists invented imagined spaces that transcended the reality of bricks, mortar and marble. 

With a record-breaking six million visits during 2013, the National Gallery remains committed to researching and showcasing its extraordinarily rich permanent collection. As a result of the research partnership between the National Gallery and the University of York, this exhibition offers a fresh interpretation of some of the National Gallery’s own Italian Renaissance collection. In addition, Building the Picture includes the Venetian master Sebastiano del Piombo's 'The Judgement of Solomon' (Kingston Lacy, The Bankes Collection, National Trust), on display in London for the first time in 30 years, and 'The Ruskin Madonna' by Andrea del Verrocchio (National Gallery of Scotland). 

In Renaissance Italy, art and architecture were closely interconnected and the boundaries between all the arts were fluid. An important reason for this was that there was no specific educational programme or apprenticeship for architects. The Florentine architect Brunelleschi, for example, trained as a goldsmith, while Michelangelo was a painter and sculptor before he designed buildings. 

Five short films commissioned to coincide with this exhibition demonstrate how contemporary practitioners and thinkers are again blurring the boundaries between media and forms of practice. The films provide modern perspectives on real and imagined architecture from award-winning Swiss architect Peter Zumthor, film-maker Martha Fiennes, art historian T J Clark, film historian John David Rhodes and computer game cinematic director Peter Gornstein. 

Caroline Campbell, Curator of Italian Paintings Before 1500 at the National Gallery, said: ''This exhibition provides a wonderful opportunity to think about how pictures can achieve an architectural sort of beauty. We can look beyond perspective to appreciate the imagined and fantastical spaces created by architecture. And how the sense of mass, scale and three-dimensionality introduced by buildings changes the balance and feel of a painting.'' 

Building the Picture explores the roles played by architecture in painting and how it affects the viewing process. Architecture within paintings has often been treated as a passive background or as subordinate to the figures. This exhibition shows how, on the contrary, architecture underpinned many paintings, and was used to design the whole picture from the very start. This was the case in Sandro Botticelli's 'Adoration of the Kings', where the ruins in the picture were planned first and still dominate the composition. Renaissance paintings are full of arches, doorways and thresholds, like those in Carlo Crivelli's 'Annunciation, with Saint Emidius' that invite the viewer into the picture and encourage us to begin a visual journey. Architecture could also be designed to tell a story, articulating the plot, deepening our understanding of the narrative and helping us to engage with the events. In Domenico Veneziano's 'Saint Zenobius Bishop of Florence restores to life a widow's son killed by an ox cart in Borgo degli Albizi, Florence' from the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, the compressed perspective of the street heightens the emotion of the desperate mother whose son has just died. 

'Building the Picture: Architecture in Italian Renaissance Painting' is also an online catalogue produced by the National Gallery to accompany the exhibition. Nicholas Penny, Director of the National Gallery, said: ''I am delighted that this catalogue will be permanently accessible on the National Gallery website, where it can be read and enjoyed by a very wide audience.'' 

Building the Picture: Architecture in Italian Renaissance Painting is curated by Dr. Amanda Lillie, Reader in History of Art at the University of York; and Caroline Campbell, Curator of Italian Paintings before 1500; with Alasdair Flint, CDA PHD student, University of York/National Gallery. 

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Duccio , The Annunciation, 1311, © The National Gallery, London

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Domenico Veneziano, Saint Zenobius Bishop of Florence restores to life a widow's son killed in Borgo degli Albizzi, Florence, about 1442-48, © Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge

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Andrea del Verrocchio and workshop, Virgin adoring the Infant Christ (‘The Ruskin Madonna’), 1470-5, © National Galleries of Scotland

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Antonello da Messina, Saint Jerome in his Study, about 1475,© The National Gallery, London

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Ercole de’ Roberti, Nativity, about 1490-93, © The National Gallery, London

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Bramantino, The Adoration of the Kings, about 1500, © The National Gallery, London

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Vincenzo Catena, Saint Jerome in his Study, probably about 1510, © The National Gallery, London

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Sebastiano del Piombo, Judgment of Solomon, 1508-1510, © National Trust Images / Derrick E. Witty

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Marcello Venusti, The Purification of the Temple, after 1550. Oil on wood, 61 x 40 cm. Bought, 1885© The National Gallery, London.

Mai Thu (1906-1980), Enfants jouant en bord de rivière

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Mai Thu (1906-1980), Enfants jouant en bord de rivière. Photo Kapandji Morhange

Peinture sur soie signée en bas à gauche et titrée au dos. Au dos, porte une inscription et une date: joie de vivre, 1961? 33 x 93,5 cm. Estimation : 8 000 - 10 000 €

Kapandji Morhange. Mercredi 07 mai à 14h00. Drouot Richelieu - Salle 5. EMail : kapandjimorhange@gmail.com - Tél. : +33 1 48 24 26 10

Attribuéà Mai Thu (1906-1980), Jeune femme assise devant une fenêtre

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Attribuéà Mai Thu (1906-1980), Jeune femme assise devant une fenêtre. Photo Kapandji Morhange

Encre et crayon noir non signé. 24 x 18 cm. Nombreuses griffures. Estimation : 800 - 1 000 €

Kapandji Morhange. Mercredi 07 mai à 14h00. Drouot Richelieu - Salle 5. EMail : kapandjimorhange@gmail.com - Tél. : +33 1 48 24 26 10


Henri Mege (1909-1984), Habitations dans la forêt, Saïgon, 1952

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Henri Mege (1909-1984), Habitations dans la forêt, Saïgon, 1952. Photo Kapandji Morhange

Huile sur panneau signé en bas à gauche, titré, daté, dédicacé et contresigné au dos. 26,5 x 45,5 cm.

Kapandji Morhange. Mercredi 07 mai à 14h00. Drouot Richelieu - Salle 5. EMail : kapandjimorhange@gmail.com - Tél. : +33 1 48 24 26 10

Henri Mege (1909-1984), Soir à Tinh Do, environs de Saïgon, 1953

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Henri Mege (1909-1984), Soir à Tinh Do, environs de Saïgon, 1953. Photo Kapandji Morhange

Huile sur isorel signé en bas à gauche, titré, daté et contresigné au dos. 10,5 x 14,5 cm

Kapandji Morhange. Mercredi 07 mai à 14h00. Drouot Richelieu - Salle 5. EMail : kapandjimorhange@gmail.com - Tél. : +33 1 48 24 26 10

Henri Mege (1909-1984), Soir d’'orage aux abords de Nai Trong, Sud Vietnam, 1962

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Henri Mege (1909-1984), Soir d’'orage aux abords de Nai Trong, Sud Vietnam, 1962. Photo Kapandji Morhange

Huile sur panneau signé en bas à droite, titré, daté, dédicacé et contresigné au dos. 18,5 x 27 cm

Kapandji Morhange. Mercredi 07 mai à 14h00. Drouot Richelieu - Salle 5. EMail : kapandjimorhange@gmail.com - Tél. : +33 1 48 24 26 10

Hemmerle New York Spring Viewing

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Hemmerle earrings made of fancy grey diamonds, iron and white gold.

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Hemmerle earrings made of tourmalines, sapphires, black finished silver and white gold.

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Hemmerle necklace made of peridot knit work, tourmaline, turquoises, zircons, brown patinated copper and white gold.

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Hemmerle bangle made of palm wood, fancy brown diamonds, black finished silver and white gold.

La Chine à Versailles, art et diplomatie au XVIIIe siècle

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VERSAILLES - L'exposition «La Chine à Versailles» retrace l'histoire des échanges politiques et artistiques entre la chine et la France au XVIIIe siècle à l'occasion du 50e anniversaire de l'établissement des relations diplomatiques entre ces deux pays en 1964. Les peintures, meubles, laques, porcelaines, tapisseries exposés témoignent du plus grand luxe de leur époque et sont d'une extrême rareté aujourd'hui. Les quelques 150 Œuvres rassemblées illustrent le goût français pour les productions artistiques chinoises, à la mode dès le règne de Louis XIV. Elles révèlent également l'intérêt des européens pour les descriptions de la Chine, adressées par les jésuites français à leurs correspondants tout au long du XVIIIe siècle. 

L'art chinois à Versailles
La réception fastueuse donnée par Louis XIV à l'occasion de l'arrivée des ambassadeurs du roi de Siam, le 1er septembre 1686, marque le début du vif intérêt que la cour porte à l'Extrême-Orient. Les cadeaux diplomatiques apportés à cette occasion contribuent à développer le goût de la cour et de la famille royale pour les productions artistiques de l'Empire du Milieu. Porcelaines, papiers peints, laques, étoffes, soieries deviennent extrêmement prisés à la cour de France. Cette passion pour «la chine» ou le «la chinage» se manifeste notamment par l'importation par la Compagnie française des Indes orientales de nombreuses oeuvres d'art chinoises et japonaises (souvent confondues par les européens). Elles sont commercialisées à Paris par les marchands-merciers. 

Cette attirance pour l'art chinois se manifeste à travers ce que l'on a appelé plus tard «la chinoiserie», ce courant du goût prend différentes formes :
- l'imitation de l'art chinois,
- l'influence de l'art chinois sur l'art français,
- l'adaptation de matériaux orientaux au goût français (par exemple l'adjonction de montures métalliques aux porcelaines d'Extrême-Orient ou encore la transformation de panneaux de paravents et de cabinets ou de boîtes en laque),
- mais aussi la création d'une Chine imaginaire et pacifique grâce à des ornemanistes ou des artistes français de grand talent comme François Boucher. 

Si les souverains français, protecteurs des manufactures, des artistes et des artisans français ne peuvent montrer ouvertement leur goût pour la Chine dans les appartements
d'apparat de Versailles, de nombreuses oeuvres d'art chinoises ou «à la chinoise» figurent dans leurs appartements privés ou dans leurs résidences de campagne favorites, reflets de leurs goûts plus personnels. Louis XIV fait par exemple recouvrir les murs et le toit du «Trianon de porcelaine» de parements et de vases de faïence imitant la porcelaine de Chine à l'instar de la pagode de porcelaine de Nankin. Louis XV demande pour le château de Choisy, réaménagé pour lui par Ange Jacques Gabriel à partir de 1740, des meubles en laque d'Extrême-Orient ou ornés de vernis «façon de la Chine», ainsi que des porcelaines et des papiers peints chinois. Marie Leszczynska, fait réaliser pour
son cabinet «des Chinois» des panneaux peints illustrant la culture et le négoce du thé. Certaines maîtresses royales, notamment Madame de Mailly ou Madame de Pompadour décorent également leurs appartements de curiosités asiatiques. Marie-Antoinette se passionne pour les boîtes et les objets en laque venus du Japon ainsi que pour les porcelaines de Chine. Elle commande des porcelaines de Chine montées pour le cabinet de la Méridienne et le cabinet doré. Un jardin anglochinois est planté en 1776 au Petit Trianon et un manège, dit «Jeu de bague» chinois, orné de paons et de dragons dorés y est aménagé peu après.  

Les 150 oeuvres rassemblées pour l’exposition proviennent de plusieurs grandes institutions françaises (Louvre, Guimet, Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Centre des Monuments nationaux…) et étrangères (collections royales anglaises, musée de l’Ermitage à Saint-Pétersbourg…) ainsi que de collections particulières.

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Coupe en jade blanc. Chine, époque Ming (1368-1644), collection musée national des Arts asiatiques Guimet.

Cette précieuse coupe, aux anses en forme de dragons, est sans doute l’un des premiers objets chinois à avoir figuré dans les collections de Louis XIV. Elle appartenait précédemment à Mazarin. En 1665, le Roi acquit la plupart des gemmes du ministre qui furent présentées à partir de 1682 à Versailles, dans le cabinet des Raretés, alors situéà l'actuel emplacement du Salon des jeux de Louis XVI. Le jade, très difficile à travailler, est toujours considéré en Chine comme une pierre précieuse.

White jade cup. China, Ming dynasty (1368-1644), from the Musée National des Arts Asiatiques – Guimet Museum collection.

This precious cup with dragons forming the handles is no doubt one of the first Chinese objects included in the collections of Louis XIV. It had previously belonged to Mazarin. In 1665, the King acquired most of the Minister’s jewels which, starting in 1682, were presented in the Cabinet des Raretés at Versailles, the site of the current Louis XVI Games Room. Jade is very hard to work with and has always been considered a gemstone in China.

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Fontaine à parfum. Porcelaine : Chine, début de l’époque Qianlong (1736-1795). Bronze doré : Paris, vers 1743
Musée national des châteaux de Versailles et de Trianon ©
 RMN-Grand Palais (Château de Versailles)

Ce vase en porcelaine "truittée", livré en 1743 par le marchand mercier Hébert pour la garde-robe de Louis XV à Versailles, avait été préalablement transformé par un bronzier en fontaine à parfum. C'est à ce jour la seule pièce de porcelaine de Chine ayant appartenu à Louis XV, bien identifiée.

Perfume fountain. Porcelain: China, early Qianlong period (1736-1795). Gilded bronze: Paris, ca. 1743. Musée National des Châteaux de Versailles et de Trianon.

This “crackled” porcelain vase, delivered in 1743 by Hébert, a marchand-mercier, for Louis XV’s wardrobe at Versailles, was transformed into a perfume fountain by a bronze-smith. To date, it is the only piece of Chinese porcelain identified as having belonged to Louis XV.

Nouveau Dessin OpenDocument

Commode à panneaux de laque du Japon et vernis parisien. Livrée pour la chambre de Louis XV à Choisy en 1744, par l’ébéniste Antoine-Robert Gaudreaus. Don de la Fondation philanthropique Edmond J. Safra, Versailles, musée national des châteaux de Versailles et de Trianon. 

Reçue en don en février 2014, cette pièce exceptionnelle sera présentée pour la première fois au public à l'occasion de l'exposition.
Cette commode à panneaux de laque et vernis parisien de l'ébéniste Gaudreaus, commandée pour la chambre du Roi à Choisy, est un parfait exemple de cette attirance de l'art français pour l'Extrême-Orient. Elle est ornée de bronzes dorés d'un dessin unique, soulignant à merveille le décor noir et or, provenant de feuilles de paravents en laque du Japon des collections de Louis XIV. C'est le marchand-mercier Hébert qui a été chargé de la préparation des panneaux de laque destinés àêtre posés sur le bâti de l'ébéniste Gaudreaus.

Commode with Japanese lacquer panels and Parisien vernis. Produced by Antoine-Robert Gaudreaus, cabinet-maker, for Louis XV’s bedchamber at Choisy in 1744. Donated by the Edmond J. Safra Philanthropic Foundation, Versailles, Musée National des Châteaux de Versailles et de Trianon.

Donated in February 2014, this exceptional piece will be presented to the public for the first time during this exhibition.
This commode with lacquer panels and Parisian veneer produced by the cabinet-maker Gaudreaus, was ordered for the King’s bedchamber at Choisy and is a perfect example of the attraction that French art had for the Far East. It is decorated with gilded bronzes with a unique design, marvellously highlighting the black and gold decoration, from the sheets of the Japanese lacquer screens in Louis XIV’s collections. Hébert, a marchand-mercier, was in charge of preparing the lacquer panels that were to be mounted on the structure produced by the cabinetmaker Gaudreaus.

Nouveau Dessin OpenDocument1

Esclave descendant une barque de marchandises et chinois fumant et prenant le thé. Huile sur toile peinte vers 1761 par plusieurs artistes français pour le cabinet «des Chinois » de la reine Marie Leszczynska à Versailles. Collection particulière.

Ce panneau d'une série de huit était encastré dans les boiseries d'un cabinet de l'appartement intérieur de Marie Leszczynska.

C'est un témoignage éloquent de l'intérêt de la Reine pour la Chine. Démontéà sa mort en 1768, il a été léguéà sa dame d'honneur, la comtesse de Noailles.

Slave getting off a freight bark and Chinese man smoking and drinking tea. Oil on canvas painted ca. 1761 by several French artists for Queen Marie Leszczynska’s “Chinese” study at Versailles. Private collection.

This panel, part of a series of eight, was mounted into the woodwork of a study in Queen Marie Leszczynska’s internal apartments. It bears eloquent testimony to the Queen’s interest in China.
Removed upon the Queen’s death in 1768, it was left to her lady in waiting, the Countess of Noailles.

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Plaque représentant l’empereur de Chine par Charles Eloi Asselin (1743-1804). Manufacture royale de porcelaine de Sèvres, vers 1776. Musée national des châteaux de Versailles et de Trianon.

Cette œuvre a été exécutée d’après un dessin aquarellé du frère Giuseppe Panzi, un jésuite présent à la cour de Pékin au XVIIIe siècle. Il s'agit d'un tableau de porcelaine qui représente l’empereur Qianlong (1711-1799), coiffé d’un bonnet de fourrure, surmonté d’une grosse perle ronde. Le portrait lui-même est entouré d‘une bande peinte à l’or.

Plaque representing the Emperor of China by Charles Eloi Asselin (1743-1804). Manufacture Royale de Porcelaine de Sèvres, ca. 1776. Musée National des Châteaux de Versailles et de Trianon.

This work was executed after a watercolour drawing by Giuseppe Panzi, a Jesuit who was at the court of Beijing in the 18th century. It is a porcelain painting representing Emperor Qianlong (1711-1799) wearing a fur hat with a large, round pearl. The portrait itself is surrounded by a strip of gold painting.

Nouveau Dessin OpenDocument2

Vue du jeu de bague chinois de Trianon par Claude-Louis Châtelet (1753-1795). Dessin à la pierre noire, aquarelle et gouache, 1786. Modène, Biblioteca Estense Universitaria.

En 1774, la reine Marie-Antoinette entre en possession du domaine de Trianon et souhaite voir planter, au Nord-Est du château, un jardin anglo-chinois. Les travaux furent confiés en 1776 à Richard Mique. La même année, on décide de construire, à proximité immédiate du château, un jeu de bague chinois, une sorte de manège dont les sièges étaient constitués de paons et de dragons et dont le mat principal était orné de figures chinoises. Le principe du jeu est simple : les joueurs devaient enfiler sur de longues broches un maximum d'anneaux fixés à un arbre central tournant.

View of the Chinese ring game at Trianon by Claude-Louis Châtelet (1753-1795). Drawing in black chalk, watercolour and gouache, 1786. Modena, Biblioteca Estense Universitaria.

In 1774, Queen Marie-Antoinette took possession of the Trianon Estate and wanted to plant an Anglo-Chinese garden to the northeast of the Palace. Richard Mique was entrusted with this work in 1776. That same year, the decision was made to build a “Chinese Ring Game” next to the Palace, a sort of carousel whose seats were made up of peacocks and
dragons and whose main mast was decorated with Chinese figures. The point of the game was simple: players used long poles to catch a maximum number of rings attached to a rotating central shaft.

Quelques oeuvres de Versailles qui pourraient être présentes à l'exposition:

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Vase Lapis de style chinois de Madame Adelaide, Manufacture de Sèvres, 1781© Château de Versailles

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Vase "Jardin", acquis en 1780 par Louis XVI pour la Grande Chambre du Roi à Versailles © Château de Versailles

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Louis-François Lécot, Cabaret chinois de madame Victoire ou Madame Adélaïde, 1775 © RMN-Grand Palais Château de Versailles / Christian Jean

Ketterer Kunst to offer a masterpiece by Georg Flegel at its Auction of Old Masters & Art of the 19th Century

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MUNICH.- Georg Flegel is not only one of the most famous European still life painters of the early 17th century, but also the first German artist to specialize in this genre. A masterpiece of his creation will be called up in Ketterer Kunst 's auction of Old Masters & Art of the 19th century with an estimate of € 90.000-120.000 on 24 May. 

Georg Flegel's famous “Schrankbild“ (”Cupboard“), today in possession of the National Gallery in Prague, was made in close connection with the “Stillleben mit Blumenstrauß und Glaspokalen“. It is an independent version of the upper half of the Prague “Schrankbild“, which explains the unusual frontal view on contrary to the normally slightly aslant perspective. Flegel's mastery becomes particularly obvious in the execution of the delicate glasses, the light reflections on their transparent surfaces seem to form a relief. The painting's amazing freshness is largely owed to the bouquet with flowers from different seasons of the year. 

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Georg Flegel, Still life with Flowers and Glass Goblets. Oil on canvas, c. 1610/20s, 43 x 54 cm (16.9 x 21.2 in). Estimate: € 90.000-120.000.

PROVENANCE: Private ownership France.
Gallery Rafael Valls, London 1993/94.
Private collection Northern Germany. 

EXHIBITION:
Georg Flegel 1566-1638. Stilleben, Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt am Main 1993, cat. no. 22, p. 108, illu.
The Lure of Still Life, Galerie Lingenauber, Düsseldorf 1995, p. 44, no. 1, illu. 

LITERATURE:
Gallery Rafael Valls, Recent Aquisition, London 1990.
Anne-Dore Ketelsen-Volkhardt, Georg Flegel. 1566-1638, Munich/Berlin 2003, cat. no. 67 (illu. in black and white on p. 276). 

Alongside Federico Barocci's red chalk drawing ”Studie eines stehenden Mannes nach rechts (Auferstandener Christus)“ from 1590/1609, estimated at € 15.000-20.000, the range of offerings in the section of Old Masters is complemented by, among others, Albrecht Dürer's small copper engraving ”Der Reiter (Ritter, Tod und Teufel)“ from 1513, which has been estimated at € 18.000-24.000. 

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Federico Barocci , Study of a standing man to the right (Risen Christ). Around 1590/1609. sanguine. Estimate: 15.000 EUR / $ 20,850.  

 On fine laid paper (with watermark "lily in a circle", including two "S"), with slightly irregular edges of the media. Approx. 34.3 x 21 cm (13,5 x 8,2 in), size of sheet. Accompanied by a written confirmation by Nicholas Turner, Halstead, dated 18 March 2014 (copy). With oral confirmation of Professor Ugo Ruggeri, Venice ( nd) and Prof. Andrea Emiliani (2012), which will start the drawing in his next publication to Barocci. PROVENANCE: Collection Cesare Frigerio (1890-1977), Milan (with collector's stamp, Lugt 4363)?. Collection Dr. Giorgio Dalla Bella (b. 1923), Milan (with collector's stamp, Lugt 3774). privately owned Italy. This sheet shows a characteristic red chalk drawing from the late Barocci. The artist produces for the topic "Christ appears Magdalene (Noli me tangere)" some varying studies on, in particular the figure of Christ. One of these studies shows Christ in a very similar attitude as on the present sheet, but executed in black chalk heightened with white with. It is owned by the Graphic Arts Collection of the Albertina in Vienna (Inv. No. 25631) and listed in the catalog raisonné of the artist (Andrea Emiliani, Federico Barocci, Ancona 2008, pp. 81, No. 47/C9). Shown is the Risen Christ, who in his empty grave grieving Mary Magdalene with the words "Noli me tangere" (Berühr not me) responds and orders her to tell the disciples of the miracle of the resurrection (John 20.11-17 ). Barocci, this scene a total of three paintings represents the earliest version from 1590 is located in the Alte Pinakothek in Munich (Inv. No. 494), two formed a little later on the one in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence and in the Allendale Collection, Bywell Hall, in England. [CB].

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Albrecht Durer (Nuremberg 1471 - 1528 Nuremberg), The Rider (The Knight, Death and the Devil), 1513. Estimate: 18.000 EUR / $ 25,020

thengraving. Bartsch 98 74 Meder c / d (of g). Schoch / Mende / Scherbaum 69 In the panel on the signature tablet with the monogram and dated. Previously nuanced pressure on fine laid paper, trimmed minimally irregular on the presentation. 24.3 x 18.6 cm (9.5 x 7.3 in). "[..] Parallel image fills a rider to the fore. He is just clamped in the image rectangle that the left hind hoof of his horse almost touches the edge . the shouldered lance ends front and back out of the picture. His armor is precious, but, measured by the Year 1513, she works antiquated. Not all armor pieces fit together. When the man had to supplement the course of his military life pieces gradually. For he is, his face, no longer young, but after damaligem understanding with over fifty an old, albeit in terms of forces unused man. His attitude in the saddle and stirrups is blameless. The rider interacts with the horse familiar as the horse with him . He holds the reins, but tightened so that the animal will be taken back something in his forward thrust. placed ears attentive to the front, it searches its way. because the is rocky, concentrated by a growing up rock wall also. An eerie place, [...] with ghostly aufragendem bare vegetation, exposed roots, a human skull in the sand, a salamander. A shaggy dog goes next to the left hind leg of the horse on foot. He, too, not a young animal, also, as shown by the big ears, at this moment, not without fear. A castle appears above the head of the knight in the background in daylight - an indication that the place with all the eeriness is not far removed from human doings. [...] This level of reality is described Dürer contrasting another, unearthly to the side. Two sinister figures, by the not be seen from the riders point of view limiting helmet and the position of a figure in the back, appear eerie, as if they had waylaid him. The front, riding on a nag to their neck an hour or death knell depends, embodied in the late medieval notion of death. [...] He has the man an hourglass, Common symbol of the ongoing human lifetime. But located in the upper part of the still slowly trickling down the sand, so that the threat of death is not enough of current awfulness. As a man of war the rider must have been a constant trusty companion of death. [...] The hybrid creatures at the right edge represents the devil. With its animal snout and the forward curved, large forehead horn he is like the devil in Dürer's woodcut "Christ in Limbo" by 1510. [...] The weapon is pushed away from the knight as he could the devil that's not dangerous. Dürer knowingly allow the viewer of the sheet in the dark about whether the rider death and the devil looks not only in spirit. [...] "(Matthias Mende, in: Schoch / Mende / Scherbaum, pp. 169f.) [CB]..

Along with Franz von Defregger, whose oil painting “Die Werbung“ (estimate € 40.000-60.000) picks up a highly emotional theme, Alfred von Wierusz-Kowalski's “Glückliche Kutschfahrt“ (estimate: € 30.000-50.000) contributes to the section of Art of the 19th century. The work is not only captivating for its surprising perspective, but also for the subtle yet dynamic style, which adds great liveliness to the motif. 

With his lovely observations of animal life, Alexander Koester, who is represented with several works, creates a particularly impressive atmosphere. His oil painting “Enten am See“ expresses freedom in nature in the best tradition of Naturalism and will enter the race with an estimate of € 30.000-40.000. Another work, “Sechs Enten am Teichufer“, has been estimated at € 25.000-35.000. 

The same estimate has been tagged to Ferdinand Olivier's ”Campagnalandschaft mit befestigter Stadt“. The artist, one of the most important representatives of the Nazarene movement, had never been to Italy at all, however, works by his brother Friedrich impressed him so much that his own illustrations gradually became Italian ideal landscapes. Accordingly, in our oil painting the unspoilt landscape with the typical villages and rock formations is almost tangible. His works are very rare on the art market. 

Edward Theodore Compton's oil painting “Bei Kaprun: Mooserbodental mit Blick auf den Karlinger Gletscher“ possesses a truly documentary value. The work from 1916 by Compton, who is represented with roundabout a dozen works, captured the original view into the Mooserboden Valley, which was turned into a barrier lake after damming the mountain creek “Kapruner Ache“. In the late 1940s, some 30 years after the painting (estimate: € 18.000-24.000) was made, a massive dam over a length of 500 meters and a height of 100 meters was build at the end of the valley. Today the lake holds 160 million cubic meters of water and serves the purpose of power generation. 

Next to Oskar Mulley's impressive painting ”Berghof“ (estimate: € 20.000-30.000), Heinrich Bürkel's c. 1850 oil painting ”Beim Hufschmied im Gebirge“ (estimate: € 15.000-20.000) and Francisco de Goya's seventh edition of the series of 80 sheets ”Los Caprichos“ (estimate: € 8.000-12.000), Pierre-Auguste Renoir's ”Le Chapeau épinglé (deuxième planche)“ (estimate: € 30.000-40.000) is also guaranteed to make for excitement in the auction room. 

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Francisco de Goya (1746 Fuendetodos - 1828 Bordeaux), 80 Bll.: Los Caprichos. 1799. Aquatintaradierungen in Blauschwarz. Estimate  8.000 EUR / 11.120 $.

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Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841 Limoges - 1919 Cagnes-sur-Mer), Le Chapeau épinglé (deuxième planche). 1898. Farblithografie. Estimate 30.000 EUR / 41.700 $.

The range of offerings of art of the 19th century is completed by, among others, Paul von Franken's ”Kaukasus“ (estimate: € 10.000-15.000) and Camille Bellanger's ”Die Plauderei“ (estimate: € 8.000-10.000), Anton Doll's oil painting ”Verschneites Dorf“ and Heinrich von Zügel's ”Schafe im Pferch“ (estimates: each € 7.000-9.000), as well as by two bronze works by Wassily Jakowlewitsch Grachev (estimate: € 9.000-12.000 and € 5.000-7.000). 

Sotheby's to sell a rare life-size masterpiece in terracotta by French artist Aimé-Jules Dalou

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French Sculptor Aimé-Jules Dalou’s Boulonnaise allaitant son enfant, Acquired in 1876 by the 3rd Marquess of Sligo, Resurfaces on to the market after 136 years in a Prominent Private Collection in Ireland. Photo: Sotheby's. 

LONDON.- Sotheby’s announced today that it will offer a supremely rare life-size masterpiece in terracotta by the great 19th-century French artist Aimé-Jules Dalou in a London sale of 19th & 20th Century Sculpture on 21 May 2014. Boulonnaise allaitant son enfant (A Young Mother from Boulogne feeding her Child) was acquired directly from the artist in 1876 by George John Browne, 3rd Marquess of Sligo, before being exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts in 1877. It was subsequently installed at Westport House, in Westport, Ireland, where it was on view until last year. Estimated at £300,000-500,000 (€360,000-600,000), the terracotta is one of the last museum-quality life-size works by Dalou in private hands and is being sold by Jeremy Browne, the 11th Marquess of Sligo. 

Alexander Kader, Head of Sotheby’s European Sculpture & Works of Art Department, commented: "Dalou’s ‘Boulonnaise allaitant’ is one of the artist’s defining masterpieces. It is an honour for Sotheby’s to bring this inspiring sculpture to the market for the first time since 1876. The sale will provide collectors and institutions with a matchless opportunity to acquire one of Dalou’s seminal works.” 

Jeremy Browne, the 11th Marquess of Sligo, said: “Dalou’s masterpiece has been enjoyed by generations of visitors to Westport House. We hope that the proceeds raised through its sale will secure the future of one of Ireland’s best-loved attractions for generations to come.” 

Boulonnaise allaitant, dazzling in the humanity of its conception and the virtuosity of its execution, is one of only four groups of a mother and her child in life-size dimensions produced by the artist during his entire career. All four were exhibited at the Royal Academy and each met with an enthusiastic reception from the public and critics. 

Dalou (1838-1902) was one of the greatest French sculptors of the 19th century, with some of his most important works being housed in the Victoria & Albert Museum in London and the Musée d’Orsay in Paris. He was recently the focus of a major 2013 retrospective exhibition at the Petit Palais in Paris, Jules Dalou, le sculpteur de la République, which has given Dalou an international profile. The Boulonnaise allaitant is the first major work by the artist to come onto the market since the Petit Palais retrospective. Its location was unknown to the organisers of the exhibition and so its forthcoming sale represents an important rediscovery for Dalou scholarship. 

In 1871, Dalou and his family fled France for England, a consequence of the Franco Prussian War and Dalou’s alignment with the Commune, which collapsed in May of that year. He quickly came to understand the taste of British collectors and maternal themes became a mainstay of his production. With Boulonnaise allaitant, Dalou synthesised two subjects which had preoccupied him in the preceding years, motherhood and women from Boulogne. The composite figure marked the culmination of Dalou’s treatment of both themes that had served his career so well. Dalou thereafter altered his focus and concentrated on public monuments. 

The nursing Boulonnaise has been known until now only as a variant statuette in plaster, with editions in porcelain and bronze. This life-size version in terracotta, signed by the artist and dated 1876, was purchased by George, 3rd Marquess of Sligo, from Dalou’s London studio, with the proviso that the artist be allowed to exhibit it publicly at the Royal Academy before delivery. 

The skill with which Dalou has sculpted the drapery folds and integrated subtle details into the whole composition is comparable with the work of Gianlorenzo Bernini, the 17th century Italian sculptor. In Boulonnaise allaitant, the smaller pleats at the top of the mother’s heavy cloak, the more monumental and sweeping folds below them, the contrasting textures of her tight-fitting bonnet and its quilted extension, the clasp with chain that secures her cloak, the wisp of a cord that secures the bonnet at the base of the neck, all suggest that Dalou is in full command. 

Dalou understood how to enhance the interactive forces of a sculptural work of art, and the medium of terracotta was especially amenable to his treatment of surfaces and details. The loving interaction between the mother and child is also expertly calibrated in its degree of focus, with an intense artistry that unifies form and content. 

Dalou’s participation in the Royal Academy exhibition of 1877 marked an apogee in the artist’s career. His submission was granted the honour of the most prestigious location, the rotunda, alongside the bronze version of Frederick Leighton’s Athlete wrestling a Python. Dalou had encouraged Leighton’s talents as a sculptor and, in turn, Leighton – who became president of the Royal Academy in 1875 – rewarded Dalou’s kindness with this generous, but most deserved gesture. 

George, 3rd Marquess of Sligo
George Browne was the eldest son of Howe Peter, 2nd Marquess of Sligo, famous ‘regency buck’ and friend of Lord Byron, Thomas de Quincy and the Prince Regent. After his father’s death in 1845 he faced the appalling realities of the Irish Famine. Disillusioned with Britain’s feeble humanitarian response to the crisis, he personally shipped in food for his tenants and campaigned for pioneering economic and social reforms. It is rather apt that this most enlightened of Dalou’s patrons married a Frenchwoman named Isobel Perronet in 1878, a year after the Boulonnaise allaitant had been installed at Westport House.

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Aimé-Jules Dalou (French, 1838-1902), Boulonnaise allaitant son enfant (A Young Mother from Boulogne feeding her Child). signed and dated: DALOU 1876; terracotta, on the original wooden revolving base; terracotta: 137cm., 54in., base: 90cm., 35½in. Estimate  300,000 — 500,000 GBP. Photo Sotheby's

Provenance: George John Browne, 3rd Marquess of Sligo (1820–1896), acquired directly from the artist in 1876 and installed at Westport House, Westport, Ireland, in 1877;
by family descent to the present owner

Exhibited: London, Royal Academy of Arts, 1877, no. 1465 (Une Boulonnaise allaitant son enfant; terra-cotta);
Westport, Westport House, 1877-2013 (on display in the Picture Gallery)

Literature: A. Graves, The Royal Academy Exhibitors, London, 1905, vol. ii, p. 234;
A. Simier and M. Kisiel, Jules Dalou, le sculpteur de la République,
Catalogue des sculptures de Jules Dalou conserveés au Petit Palais,
exh. cat. Petit Palais, Paris, 2013, pp. 346 and 350

This superb, and exceedingly rare, life-size terracotta by Jules Dalou was first exhibited publically in 1877 at the Royal Academy of Arts in London, where it was displayed alongside Frederick Leighton’s Athlete wrestling a Python.  During his entire career, Dalou composed only four such groups of a mother and her child in life-size dimensions.  All were exhibited at the Royal Academy and greeted with great enthusiasm by the contemporary public and critics.  The qualitative excellence of these works is dazzling in the humanity of their conception and virtuosity of execution.

Dalou was one of the greatest French sculptors of the 19th century, but he first established himself as a major artist in London between 1871 and 1879. At the Parisian Salon of 1870 he had attracted widespread admiration with a life-size genre subject, La Brodeuse, but the Franco-Prussian War and the Commune intervened.   As one of the founding members of the Fédération des Artistes, led by Gustave Courbet, he allied himself with the Commune. With its collapse in May 1871, Dalou was forced to flee to England, where he was received by his friend, the painter Alphonse Legros. By the time of the 1872 Royal Academy exhibition, Dalou had come to understand the taste of British collectors.  He scored a major success with two of his entries that season, a young woman in the exotic costume of a Boulonnaise, Jour des Rameaux à Boulogne (a terracotta statuette), and a contemporary Parisian mother, nursing her child, with an English title, Maternal Joy (a life-size statue in patinated plaster).  Legros had already popularized women from Boulogne in his paintings, and Dalou made several more compositions featuring this same motif, as well as creating a small edition of the popular Jour des Rameaux for the market.

Maternal themes were a mainstay of Dalou’s production in England.  His Paysanne française (life-size terracotta statue, Royal Academy, 1873), and Hush-a-bye (life-size terracotta statue with an English title, Royal Academy, 1874) ingratiated him further with British collectors and the public.  He also created, but did not exhibit at the Royal Academy, a statuette, Une Parisienne allaitant, which was a variant on Maternal Joy.  The Boulonnaise motif reappeared, with the same beautiful protagonist in the same costume, as a single figure seen kneeling or seated in prayer (Boulonnaise au chapelet), and paired with an older woman (Boulonnaises à l’Eglise, terracotta, Royal Academy 1876).  All of these were statuettes, never enlarged to life-size dimensions.

In 1876 Dalou synthesized the maternal and Boulonnaise themes with the present Boulonnaise allaitant.  The young woman, recognizably the same character, has left behind her virginal devotions and become a mother.  The unvarying cycle of provincial life has naturally replicated itself.  This composite figure marked the end of Dalou’s treatment of both themes that had served his career so well.  Thereafter, he concentrated on public monuments, which he had come to regard as the highest calling of a 19th-century sculptor.  Echoes of the maternal theme might appear in the context of a public work, such as in theCharity surmounting a drinking fountain for the Royal Exchange in London [1878], and the monument to Queen Victoria’s dead grandchildren for the royal chapel at Windsor [1877-79], but genre, intimate themes, and mothers with their children, virtually disappeared from his repertoire.

The nursing Boulonnaise has been known to us until now only as a statuette in plaster, with editions in porcelain (Sèvres) and bronze (Susse Frères). The pose of the present life-size terracotta reverses that of the smaller versions, but is identical to a drawing by Dalou and an anonymous engraving, both made after the work, that appeared in the art press at the time of the Royal Academy exhibition.  As is consistent with Dalou’s working procedure, with each stage of the enlargement from sketch to final statue, he refined the work and added greater detail.  Reversals of pose occurred frequently during this process, so the smaller versions in reverse with fewer refinements and details must precede the life-size version, rather than be reductions made for purposes of an edition afterward.

Arguably, no other sculptor since Gianlorenzo Bernini dazzled his audience with the virtuosity of his drapery folds and spectacular details integrated into the whole fabric of a sculpture, the way Dalou could.  The smaller pleats at the top of the mother’s heavy cloak, the more monumental and sweeping folds below them, the contrasting textures of her tight-fitting bonnet and its quilted extension, and the lovingly-rendered clasp with chain that secures her cloak, as well as the wisp of a cord that secures the bonnet at the base of her neck, all suggest that a master is in charge. Dalou fully embraced realism, but never at the expense of his intense artistry.  He could unify form and content so totally that they seem to dissolve into each other.  The loving interaction between mother and child is enhanced by an artistic focus so intense that it seems as if we are witnessing life itself, rather than a fabrication by an artist.

Dalou understood that degrees of focus, from intensely realized to peripherally blurred, are essential to mimic the way we experience the world and thereby enhance the interactive force of a work of sculpture.  Terracotta is especially amenable to such treatment.  No other artist working in three dimensions understood this perceptual fact, which Édouard Manet and his Impressionist descendants had already articulated in paint, as well as Dalou. Une Boulonnaise allaitant forcefully demonstrates selective degrees of treating surfaces and details throughout a whole work of sculptural art.

Dalou’s success and recognition in London had grown with each passing year, but the Royal Academy exhibition of 1877 marked an apogee.  That year his submission had been granted the honour of the most prestigious location, the rotunda, alongside the bronze version of Frederick Leighton’s Athlete wrestling a Python.  The two men were good friends, and it was through Dalou’s encouragement that the bronze Athlete came into existence.  Dalou was extremely grateful for the honour bestowed upon him and his Boulonnaise allaitant.  On May 2, 1877, he modestly wrote to Leighton: “I was very flattered by the honor that they have paid my humble terracotta, placing it next to your bronze; this is one more happy memory that I have of the academy and of you, my dear Leighton, because I know how great a role you have played to have my statue so well placed.”

Dalou’s statue was acquired by George Browne, 3rd Marquess of Sligo. By family tradition, it was purchased directly from the artist’s London studio in 1876. As was often his practice, Dalou would have sold the work with the proviso that he be allowed to exhibit it publicly before delivery, hence its appearance in the 1877 Royal Academy exhibition. George Browne was the eldest son of Howe Peter, 2nd Marquess of Sligo, famous ‘regency buck’ and friend of Lord Byron, Thomas de Quincy and the Prince Regent. After his father’s death in 1845 he faced the appalling realities of the Irish Famine. Disillusioned with Britain’s feeble humanitarian response to the crisis, he personally shipped in food for his tenants and campaigned for pioneering economic and social reforms. It is rather apt that this most enlightened of Dalou’s patrons married a Frenchwoman named Isobel Perronet in 1878, a year after the Boulonnaise allaitant had been installed at Westport House.

FURTHER SALE HIGHLIGHT
Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier’s Jeune fille des environs de Rome Sotheby’s sale presents two of the most important 19th-century sculptures on the market in recent years. Alongside the Dalou, the auction features an important and beautifully carved marble bust by Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier that comes directly from the artist’s family. Jeune fille des environs de Rome (Young Girl from the environs of Rome) represents one of Cordier’s rare Roman subjects. Marbles by Cordier are becoming increasingly desirable to collectors and museums. Characteristic of the artist’s finest works, the marble has been enlivened with the added dimension of polychromy and appears to have been the only one of Cordier’s Roman sculptures to have been polychromed. Like Dalou, Cordier (1827-1905) was one of the greatest French 19th-century sculptors. This sculpture was displayed at the Musée d’Orsay, Paris in 2004 in an exhibition on Cordier. The combination of excellence in the quality of carving, together with the delicate hints of colour, serves to create one of his most subtle and charming busts (estimate £70,000-120,000 / €84,000-120,000)

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Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier (French, 1827-1905), Jeune fille des environs de Rome. signed: CORDIER, tinted white marble, 80cm., 31½in. overall. Estimate 70,000 — 100,000 GBP. Photo Sotheby's

Provenance: Sale of Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier's Studio, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 21 January 1865, no. 32;
there re-acquired by Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier for 1,210FF;
by descent to the present owners

Exhibited: Paris, Musée d'Orsay, Charles Cordier (1827-1905), sculpteur, l'autre et l'ailleurs, 2 February - 2 May, 2004, no. 27;
Quebec City, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Charles Cordier (1827-1905), sculpteur, l'autre et l'ailleurs, 10 June - 6 September, 2004, no. 27;
New York, Dahesh Museum of Art, Facing the Other. Charles Cordier (1827-1905), 12 October 2004 - 9 January 2005

Literature: J. Durand-Révillon, 'Un promoteur de la sculpture polychrome sous le Second Empire, Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier (1827-1905)', Bulletin de la Société de l'histoire de l'art français, session of 6 February 1982, 1984, pp. 196, no. 122;
L. de Margerie and É. Papet (eds.), Charles Cordier (1827-1905), sculpteur, l'autre et l'ailleurs [Facing the Other. Charles Cordier (1827-1905)], exh. cat. Musée d'Orsay, Paris; Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Quebec City; Dahesh Museum of Art, New York, 2004, pp. 38-39, 182, no. 27, cat. res. no. 323

This important and beautifully carved marble bust by Charles Cordier comes directly from the artist’s family. It represents one of his rare Roman subjects, a young girl from the plains around Rome, the Campagna. Exhibited at the landmark 2004 retrospective exhibition Facing the Other. Charles Cordier Ethnographic Sculptor (1827-1905), the bust was offered by Cordier at his 1865 studio sale, but, unusually, was bought back by the sculptor, indicating its significance both to Cordier and within his wider oeuvre. Characteristic of the artist’s greatest works, the marble has been enlivened with the added dimension of polychromy. However, in contrast to the dazzling polychromed sculptures for which Cordier became most famous, here he has subtly tinted the marble, providing the viewer with the fleeting sense that the girl might, Pygmalion-like, just come alive.

Charles Cordier was one of the greatest French 19th-century sculptors. Appointed ethnographic sculptor to the Muséum national d’histoire naturelle in Paris in 1851, a post he held for fifteen years, Cordier established an international reputation for himself through his sympathetic and arresting portrayals of different racial types. Initially inspired by the Orientalist movement in art, in particular Eugène Delacroix’s Eastern subjects, Cordier’s oeuvre increasingly adopted a scientific aspect. The ethnographic busts for which he became most famous often betray a startling naturalism, tempered by dramatic poses and exotic costumes. 

Interest in the different peoples of the globe preoccupied French society in the 19th-century. The fields of anthropology and ethnology became increasingly high profile. Exhibitions which showcased living people from other regions of the world drew huge crowds. Disturbingly, numerous theorists published writings espousing the superiority of white Europeans over blacks. Cordier, however, displayed a palpable sympathy for people of other races in his ethnographic busts. Chiefly concerned with the search for beauty in every peoples, he wrote in 1865 before his trip to Egypt, ‘I wish to present the race just as it is, in its own beauty, absolutely true to life, with its passions, its fatalism, in its quiet pride and conceit, in its fallen grandeur, but the principles of which have remained since antiquity’ (as quoted by Margerie, op. cit., p. 28). Few contemporary commentators, with the exception of writers such as Victor Hugo, the Abbé Grégoire, and Madame de Staël, offered such enlightened views. In his official role at the Muséum national d’histoire naturelle, Cordier embarked on a number of government sponsored missions to different parts of the world in order to record a series of modern racial types in sculpture, the ideal beauty of each peoples. He travelled to Algeria in 1856, where he modelled his famous Mauresque d’Alger chantant (Moorish Woman of Algiers Singing) and, as mentioned above, to Egypt in 1866, where he conceived his celebrated Cheik Arabe du Caire (Arab Sheik of Cairo). However, it was in 1858 that Cordier travelled to Greece, stopping for a number of months in Rome, where he created the present masterful ethnographic study.

In Rome, Cordier was confronted with the world of the ancients, the Eternal City, which had inspired countless generations of French artists. Writing to Frédéric Bourgeois de Mercey from Rome in June 1858, he exclaimed ‘the great masters have inflamed my desire to work’ (AN, Paris, F21 72). Cordier created three important sculptures whilst in Rome: the present bust, his La belle Gallinara, Jeune fille des environs de Rome (The Beautiful Gallinara, Young Girl from around Rome), and hisRomaine du Trastévère, 25 ans (A Young Woman of Trastevere). The latter, believed lost when the catalogue for the 2004 Cordier exhibition was published, was subsequently rediscovered and sold in these rooms on 23 November 2010, lot 1. A monumental bust, with virtuoso carved pearls suspended from the girl’s neck, this marble provides a sense of the pride and grandeur of Rome. In contrast to Cordier’s two other Roman works, the Gallinara, of which the locations of both the plaster and the marble are unknown, was conceived as a life-size statue. Interestingly, Cordier used the same model for both this statue and the present bust, and there are obvious stylistic and compositional correspondences between the two, most notably the distinctive hat.

Cordier’s decision to represent a girl from the lands surrounding Rome, theCampagna, is significant. The most revered French artist to have trained and worked in Rome, Claude Lorrain (1600-1682), made the Campagna the focus of his artistic endeavours, idealizing its flat, low-lying, landscape with temples, pastoral figures and placid grazing animals. Claude’s attempts to conjour up a lost antique past (the 17th-century Campagna was, in fact, a barren, over-farmed, hostile environment, plagued by banditti), inspired generations of French artists, and proved particularly popular with visiting English Grand Tourists, who sought to emulate the landscapes he painted in their own country estates. Cordier’s choice of a model from Rome’s hinterlands might thus be seen as an homage to Claude and to earlier traditions in French art.

The present marble appears to have been the only one of Cordier’s Roman sculptures to have been polychromed, adding a sense of exoticism and vitality to this charming image. Cordier had been interested in the notion of the colour of sculpture since early in his career. Inspired by his namesake, the 17th-century French sculptor active in Rome, Nicolas Cordier (1567-1612), he combined bronze with sumptuous marbles found on his travels, such as in his remarkable oxidized silver-plated bronze and onyx-marble Nègre du Soudan (Negro of the Sudan) in the Musee d’Orsay, Paris. Later in his career he would create magnificent enamelled, silvered and gilt bronzes, combined with exotic marbles. These dazzling sculptures created a sensation, being praised by some critics for their novelty and genuius, whilst being damned by others as industrial decoration.

The present bust, in being subtly tinted, references a more deliberately classicizing approach to polychromed sculpture. The golden tint to the girl’s hair and the light rouge applied to her corset are closely reminiscent of John Gibson’s celebrated neoclassical Tinted Venus of 1851-56, which had been exhibited in Rome in 1854. Gibson’s Tinted Venus was undoubtedly influenced by the fashionable contemporary theory that the Ancients merely tinted small parts of their statuary, such as the lips and hair. Cordier likewise appears to have followed this theory, opting to portray his modern Roman Venus in a manner similar to that of his ancient predecessors. It is seems possible that he may even have been influenced by Gibson’s model.

The present marble is beautifully carved. Observe the superb floral patterns adorning the girl’s belt, the soft, crushed, folds of her chemise, and the smooth, polished, skin of her flesh. The combination of such excellence in the quality of carving, together with the delicate hints of colour, serve to create one of Cordier’s most subtle and charming ethnographic busts.

RELATED LITERATURE
A. Blühm, The Colour of Sculpture 1840-1919, exh. cat. Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, and Henry Moore Institute, Leeds, 1996, pp. 170-173, nos. 47-49; L. de Margerie, '"The most beautiful Negro is not the one who looks most like us' - Cordier, 1862', L. de Margerie and É. Papet (eds.), Charles Cordier (1827-1905), sculpteur, l'autre et l'ailleurs [Facing the Other. Charles Cordier (1827-1905)], exh. cat. Musée d'Orsay, Paris; Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Quebec City; Dahesh Museum of Art, New York, 2004, pp. 13-49; R. Panzanelli, E. Schmidt and K. Lapatin,The Color of Life. Polychromy in Sculpture From Antiquity to the Present, exh. cat. J. Paul Getty Museum, 2008, pp. 160-165, no. 31-33


Erik Thomsen Gallery presents 30 works by Inoue Yuichi, one of the great artists of postwar Japan

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Inoue Yuichi, Ju 樹 (Tree), 1978. Panel; ink on Japanese paper, 47 1/4 x 74 1/4 in. (120 x 188.5 cm). Published: Unagami, Catalogue Raisonné, Vol. 3, pp. 162, 593 (no. 78051)

NEW YORK, NY.- Erik Thomsen Gallery presents 30 works by Inoue Yuichi, one of the great artists of postwar Japan. Yuichi's early experiments were shown in New York six decades ago in the summer of 1954, when the Museum of Modern Art mounted the exhibition Japanese Calligraphy. 

40 years later Yuichi's searing masterpiece Ah, Yokokawa National School(1978), a work inspired by the horrors of wartime bombing, provoked comparison with Picasso's Guernica when it was included in the exhibition Japanese Art After 1945: Scream Against the Sky, curated by Alexandra Munroe and held at the Guggenheim Museum. 

Two decades later, this show offers visitors an opportunity to take a broad view of Yuichi's legacy. The exhibition features large, almost abstract works dating from the late 1950s and early 1960s, when Yuichi was still resolving his struggle to come to terms with the conflict between pure abstraction and the written word. The bulk of the exhibition is taken up with selections from his great series of single-character visual declarations, executed in the later 1960s and the 1970s. 

Often compared with Franz Kline, Yuichi's achievement above all rests in his success in straddling West and East, in combining two visual languages--written characters and abstract expressionism--to convey deeply felt inner conflict and anguish. The strokes of his kanji, sometimes so thick that they are more mass than line, explode onto the paper with a visceral energy that cries out for our total attention. Yuichi's eccentric and wonderfully sparse works create a new world in which clarity of meaning and intensity of emotion are fused into an integral whole. 

The featured works published in the catalog are included in the monumental 3-volume catalogue raisonne published from 1996 to 2000. 

Due to the large scale of the works, the exhibition has been divided into two rotations, with the first half on view until May 27 and the second half from May 28 through June 27. 

The exhibition opening hours are weekdays 11 am - 5 pm. The gallery will also be open on Saturday May 10 and Saturday May 17, 11-5. 

The gallery will host one more reception to launch the second rotation on Wednesday, May 28th, 5-8 pm. 

2014-04-inoue-yuichi

Inoue Yuichi, Kotsu 骨, (Bone), 1959. Panel; ink on Japanese paper, 72 3/4 x 70 1/4 in. (185 x 178.5 cm). Published: Unagami, Catalogue Raisonné, Vol. 1, pp. 142, 680 (no. 59031). 

A diamond bracelet

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A diamond bracelet. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2014

Designed as nine oval-shaped flower links alternated with nine graduated rectangular-cut diamonds, weighing approximately 3.32, 3.00, 2.36, 2.35, 2.09, 2.01, 2.01, 1.82 and 1.58 carats, mounted in gold, 18.0 cm. Estimate CHF220,000 – CHF250,000 ($252,427 - $286,849)

Accompanied by 9 reports, all dated 27 October 2008, from the GIA Gemological Institute of America stating the following:
Weight Colour Clarity
3.32 ct E VS1
3.00 ct G VS1
2.36 ct F VS1
2.35 ct F VVS2
2.09 ct D VS2
2.01 ct G VS2
2.01 ct F VVS2
1.82 ct H VS1
1.58 ct G VS1

Please note that the reports are more than five years old and might require an update

Christie's. GENEVA MAGNIFICENT JEWELS. 14 May 2014, Geneva - http://www.christies.com/

An antique diamond rivière necklace

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An antique diamond rivière necklace. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2014

Designed as a series of graduated old-cut diamond collets with closed-back setting, mounted in silver and gold, 18th Century, 42.0 cm. Estimate CHF300,000 – CHF400,000 ($344,219 - $458,959)

Christie's. GENEVA MAGNIFICENT JEWELS. 14 May 2014, Geneva - http://www.christies.com/

A pair of transparent red glass bowls, Qianlong seal marks and period

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55cfb11935517de0e0ef00c8f2ae3b7c

4576ba88517f1b46b0de327e5d67e39c

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A pair of transparent red glass bowls, Qianlong seal marks and period. Photo Sotheby's

each with deep rounded sides rising from a straight foot to a gently flaring rim, incised to the base with a four-character seal mark within a double-square, the glass of a rich transparent blood-red colour. Quantité: 2 - 11.4cm., 4 ½ in. Estimation 25,000 — 30,000 GBP

Sotheby's. Fine Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art. London, 14 mai 2014 - http://www.sothebys.com/

A transparent green glass vase, Yongzheng seal mark and period

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55cfb11935517de0e0ef00c8f2ae3b7c

4576ba88517f1b46b0de327e5d67e39c

A transparent green glass vase, Yongzheng seal mark and period. Photo Sotheby's

the ovoid body rising from a concave base to rounded shoulders, surmounted by a gently flaring neck, the glass of a transparent yellow-green tone, incised to the base with a four-character reign mark within a double-square; 19.2cm., 7 ½ in. Estimation 15,000 — 25,000 GBP

Provenance: A Swedish Private Collection.

Sotheby's. Fine Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art. London, 14 mai 2014 - http://www.sothebys.com/

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