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Beau coffret à doucine formant cabinet. Travail étranger, probablement indo-portugais du XVIIIe siècle

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Beau coffret à doucine formant cabinet, en bois plaqué d’'écaille brune et d'’ivoire. Travail étranger, probablement indo-portugais du XVIIIe siècle. Photo courtesy Mercier & Cie

à décor de damier et chevrons stylisés, dans des encadrements à filet. Il ouvre par un abattant qui dissimule des casiers. En façade deux portes dissimulant six tiroirs. (Éclats). 27,5 x 32 x 22,5 cm. Estimation 4 000 € - 4 500 €

Mercier & Cie. Lundi 8 juillet 2013. Hôtel des ventes de Lille - 14, rue des jardins - 59000 Lille. Tél. : 03 20 12 24 24 - Fax : 03 20 51 06 62 - contact@mercier.com


Calcite, Arizona, USA

Armoire à portes à panneaux de laque de Chine incrustés de pierres de lard. Attribuéà Adrien Faizelot Delorme (1722-1791)

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Armoire à portes à panneaux de laque de Chine incrustés de pierres de lard. Attribuéà Adrien Faizelot Delorme (1722-1791). Photo courtesy Kohn

Bâti de chêne, placage d’amarante, bois de rose, platane et prunier, laque de Chine, pierres de lard et bronzes dorés. H. 152 cm, L. 133,5 cm, P. 38 cm. Restaurations d’usage et d’entretien. Estimation : 180 000 / 250 000 €

Ce très beau meuble en armoire à hauteur d’appui ouvre en façade par deux vantaux découvrant quatre étagères et qui sont ornés de rarissimes panneaux de laque de Chine incrustés de pierres de lard. Sur un fond noir évoluent cavaliers et guerriers dans un paysage lacustre bordé de pins et de rochers.
Ce décor n’est pas sans rappeler la commode de Matthieu Criaerd conservée au Musée du Louvre qui présente en façade ainsi que sur les petits côtés des panneaux en laque de Chine aux scènes similaires à notre meuble.
La grande originalité de ces panneaux réside dans le fait que toutes les figures humaines représentées sont réalisées en pierres de lard, une pierre semi-précieuse qui ornait à l’origine les paravents, coffres et cabinets chinois.
Ce type de décor fut extrêmement peu utilisé dans le mobilier d’ébénisterie français au XVIIIe siècle.
Plus proche de notre modèle, la collection de M. Seligmann à paris conserva une armoire de structure et d’ornementation comparables, à savoir des panneaux de laque incrustés de pierre de lard, un placage de prunier en frisage visible sur les montants et en chevrons sur la battée centrale, une partie basse en accolade et une corniche en arbalète.
La renommée d’Adrien Delorme en tant qu’artiste de la marqueterie était telle qu’il est mentionné dans les almanachs de l’époque comme « l’un des (ébénistes) les plus habiles et réputés dans la production de marqueterie ».
Le placage en frisage est une caractéristique de son art, jouant avec les contrastes de bois positionnés en fils contrariés, en chevrons ou en étoile.
Il réserva également une grande part de sa production à des meubles en laques d’Extrême Orient ou en vernis européens.

Adrien Faizelot Delorme (1722-1791). Reçu Maître le 22 juin 1748 Paris, vers 1760

RÉFÉRENCES BIBLIOGRAPHIQUES: Thibaut Wolvesperges, Le meuble français en laque au XVIIIe siècle, éd. de l’Amateur, Paris, 2000
Philippe Siguret, Le style Louis XV, éd. Office du Livre, Fribourg, 1965

Kohn. Mardi 2 juillet 2013. HÔTEL LE BRISTOL – SALON CASTELLANE 112 rue du Faubourg Saint Honoré– 75008 Paris

Garniture de cheminée «À La Chinoise » avec sujets en porcelaine de Locré. Par François Béliard, Paris, époque Louis XVI

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Garniture de cheminée «À La Chinoise » avec sujets en porcelaine de Locré. Par François Béliard (Mort en 1795), Paris, époque Louis XVI. Photo courtesy Kohn

Bronzes dorés, porcelaine de Paris, marbre, émail et verre Cadran signé BÉLIARD ET FILS à PARIS Marque de la porcelaine : deux torches croisées et K Pendule : H. 65 cm, L. 30 cm, P. 25 cm Baldaquins : H. 40 cm, L. 22 cm, P. 18 cm. Estimation : 150 000 / 180 000 €

Cette garniture de cheminée est constituée d’une pendule à portique en forme de pagode chinoise à deux niveaux et de deux baldaquins également dans le style chinois.
La pendule, reposant sur une base en marbre blanc à petits pieds toupies, est ornée en son centre d’un couple de magots en porcelaine blanche se tenant debout devant un tronc d’arbre. Quatre colonnes fuselées en bronze ciselé et doréà motifs feuillagés supportent le dais accueillant le niveau supérieur sur lequel est posé le mouvement.
Il est encadré de colonnes torses qui ellesmêmes supportent le toit sommé d’une fi gure de mandarin tenant une ombrelle.
Les baldaquins reprennent ces mêmes motifs de colonne torsadée.
L’architecture s’orne de nombreux sujets se référant à l’Extrême-Orient tels dragons, clochettes et idéogrammes.
Le cadran en émail blanc indique les heures et les quantièmes en chiffres arabes.
Il porte la signature BÉLIARD ET FILS à PARIS. François Béliard, issu d’une dynastie de maîtres horlogers, devint, après obtention de sa maîtrise en 1749, Horloger du Roi, puis en 1766, Valet de chambre-Horloger Ordinaire du Roi en succédant à Martinot.
Cet ensemble témoigne du grand raffinement des arts horlogers durant la seconde moitié du XVIIIe siècle et cette interprétation européenne des références orientales. Ainsi, les sujets en porcelaine blanche, aux costumes chinois, adoptent une attitude toute occidentale.
Ils portent la marque de la Manufacture parisienne de Locré, deux flambeaux croisés, utilisée entre 1773 et 1785 et celle du modeleur « K ».
Cette maison se fit une spécialité des petits groupes notamment d’inspiration asiatique comme le montre celui appartenant à la célèbre collection Dubouché, daté vers 1775 (fig. 1). Fondée en 1772 par Jean-Baptiste Locré, cette manufacture fut l’une des premières à utiliser le kaolin provenant de Saint-Yrieix, après Sèvres (en 1769)
et Limoges (en 1771). En 1773, Locré déposa sa marque, deux torches croisées.
En 1787, Laurent Russinger, sculpteur et collaborateur de Locré rachète la fabrique qui prit alors le nom de Locré-Russinger.
Cette garniture de cheminée alliant luxe et préciosité devait susciter l’admiration et l’étonnement des amateurs et témoigner de la culture de son propriétaire.

François Béliard (Mort en 1795). Reçu Maître Horloger en 1749

Kohn. Mardi 2 juillet 2013. HÔTEL LE BRISTOL – SALON CASTELLANE 112 rue du Faubourg Saint Honoré– 75008 Paris

Coupe aux armes du comte Von Schärffenberg et de la comtesse Von Leiningen-Dachsburg. Milieu du XVIIe siècle, entre 1657 et 1666

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Coupe aux armes du comte Von Schärffenberg et de la comtesse Von Leiningen-Dachsburg. Milieu du XVIIe siècle, entre 1657 et 1666. Photo courtesy Kohn

Cristal de roche et bronzes dorés. H. 14 cm, L. 14 cm, P. 11 cm. Estimation : 60 000 / 80 000 €

Cette coupe en cristal de roche gravée adopte une forme de nautile très en vogue aux XVIe et XVIIe siècles.
Elle s’orne de cornes d’abondance d’oùémergent des fleurs et des blasons de deux familles, les Comtes von Leiningen-Dachsburg, d’origine allemande et des Comtes von Schärffenberg, d’Autriche.
L’anse est figurée par un dauphin à la queue enroulée dans un élégant mouvement en bronze doré.
La panse repose sur un haut piédouche ceint d’un anneau en bronze doré.
La présence des deux armoiries indique la destination de cet objet réaliséà l’occasion de l’union des membres des deux familles, en l’occurrence, il s’agit ici du Comte Johann Christoph von Schärffenberg (mort en 1666) et de la Comtesse Polyxena von Leiningen-Dachsburg (1617-1668).
Leiningen est le nom d’une grande famille allemande dont les terres furent situées principalement en Alsace, en Lorraine et dans le Palatinat.
Le premier Comte de Leiningen connu serait Emich II (mort avant 1138). Par le jeu des alliances, elle devient très puissante et fut élevée au rang des Princes d’Empire.
La branche cadette, connue sous le nom de Leiningen-Dachsburg fut très florissante surtout aux XVIe et XVIIe siècles.
Le dessin et la gravure de cet objet sont caractéristiques des chefs d’œuvre exécutés par les ateliers milanais de la fin du XVIe et du XVIIe siècle comme en témoigne la précieuse collection de Louis XIV et de son fils le Grand Dauphin.

RÉFÉRENCE BIBLIOGRAPHIQUE Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, Europäische Stammtafeln, Band IV, Marburg, 1975, tafeln 23

Kohn. Mardi 2 juillet 2013. HÔTEL LE BRISTOL – SALON CASTELLANE 112 rue du Faubourg Saint Honoré– 75008 Paris.

Louis XIV et Marie-Thérèse d’Autriche. Deux médaillons formant pendant. Attribuéà Antoine Coysevox (1640-1710).

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Louis XIV et Marie-Thérèse d’Autriche. Deux médaillons formant pendant. Attribuéà Antoine Coysevox (1640-1710). Paris, vers 1680-1690. Photo courtesy Kohn

Marbre blanc. H. 53 cm, L. 41 cm. Estimation : 100 000 / 150 000 €

Réalisés en bas relief les portraits du Roi de France et de son épouse, présentés de profil sur un fond ovale, se font face. Marie-Thérèse, au port altier, est coiffée d’une épaisse chevelure bouclée retenue en chignon souple dont quelques mèches s’échappent pour tomber sur l’épaule. Parée de perles, elle revêt une robe aux larges drapés retenus par deux broches. Face à elle, le Roi est coiffé d’une épaisse perruque bouclée tombant sur les épaules et se présente à la manière antique portant une armure ornée d’un mufle de lion.
Il porte une fine moustache qu’il rasera en 1694, permettant une datation précise des portraits du Roi.
L’ensemble de la composition, traitée à la fois avec puissance, notamment dans le rendu des boucles lourdes et profondes, mais également avec finesse et souci du détail, témoigne de la virtuosité de son auteur, artiste de grand talent qui a sut rendre perceptible la grandeur de ces deux personnes royales et leur réalisme psychologique.
Ces portraits sont à rapprocher des deux médaillons placés sur le cénotaphe de Louis XIV et de Marie-Thérèse dans la crypte de l’Abbaye de Saint-Denis attribués à Antoine Coysevox.
Les similitudes sont frappantes tant pour l’un que pour l’autre.
La Reine montre cette même coiffure, ces traits lourds, cette expression hautaine et détail particulièrement notoire, cette perle baroque montée en pendant d’oreille.
Le Roi, quant à lui, présente cette ligne de nez identique, cette lourde chevelure aux boucles profondes et cette petite moustache. Sculpteur du Roi en 1666, Antoine Coysevox contribua aux travaux de décoration de Versailles, de Marly, de Chantilly et de Sceaux. En parallèle de ces grandes commandes, Coysevox réalisa de nombreux portraits en buste de la famille royale et de son entourage, tels que Colbert,
Mazarin, Vauban ou Henri de la Tour d’Auvergne.
Il achèvera sa brillante carrière en qualité de Directeur de l’Académie en 1702. Son OEuvre est immense. Conservé dans les plus grandes institutions muséales, il fut le modèle de nombreux sculpteurs de son époque et des siècles suivants. Puissants, expressifs et chargés d’émotion, ses portraits transcrivent la personnalité de ses modèles avec beaucoup de réalisme teinté d’un soupçon d’idéalisme.
Témoignages exceptionnels de l’art du portrait royal au subtil rendu psychologique, ces profils ont été, de par l’importance de leur créateur, la qualité du poli du matériau et le rendu des traits et des expressions, probablement conçus pour répondre à une commande destinée à un haut dignitaire ou à une institution.

RÉFÉRENCES BIBLIOGRAPHIQUES: Georges Keller-Dorian, Antoine Coysevox (1640-1720), catalogue raisonné de son oeuvre, tome I, Paris, 1920, n°28, p.34-35 et n°35, p.47-48 (reproduit planches 49 et 62)
James G. Mann, Wallace collection catalogues /Sculpture, Londres, 1981, p.6 (reproduit, plate 6)
Sarah Munoz, Le portrait royal sculpté en médaillon en France aux XVIe et XVIIe siècles : de François Ier à Louis XIV, Les Cahiers de la Framespa, novembre 2012 (http://framespa.revues.org/1965)

Kohn. Mardi 2 juillet 2013. HÔTEL LE BRISTOL – SALON CASTELLANE 112 rue du Faubourg Saint Honoré– 75008 Paris.

Paire de sphinges, France, vers 1700

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Paire de sphinges, France, vers 1700. Photo courtesy Kohn

Marbre de Carrare. H. 82 cm, L. 102 cm, P. 44 cm. Pas d'estimation

Kohn. Mardi 2 juillet 2013. HÔTEL LE BRISTOL – SALON CASTELLANE 112 rue du Faubourg Saint Honoré– 75008 Paris.

Le supplice de Marsyas. Attribuéà François Girardon (1628-1715). France, époque Louis XIV, fin du XVIIe siècle-début du XVIIIe

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Le supplice de Marsyas. Attribuéà François Girardon (1628-1715). France, époque Louis XIV, fin du XVIIe siècle-début du XVIIIe siècle. Photo courtesy Kohn

Bronze patiné brun nuancé. H. 60 cm, L. 15,5 cm, P. 14 cm. Estimation : 130 000 / 150 000 €

Ce sujet en bronze patiné illustre l’épisode mythologique du supplice du silène Marsyas, qui osa défier le dieu Apollon dans un concours musical. Vaincu, il fut alors condamnéàêtre écorché vif, suspendu à un pin afin de subir le terrible châtiment.
Il s’agit ici d’une version réduite d’un modèle original en terre cuite de François Girardon (1628-1715) réalisé d’après les répliques romaines en marbre du Ier ou du IIe siècle après J.-C., exécutées elles-mêmes d’après un original grec en bronze de la fin du IIIe siècle avant J.-C aujourd’hui disparu.
Les deux répliques romaines connues firent partie des deux plus grandes collections italiennes de la Renaissance, l’un appartint aux Borghèse à Rome (acquise par Napoléon en 1807, Musée du Louvre, inv. Ma 542-MR267), la seconde est conservée à la Galleria degli Uffizi, à Florence et figurait sur l’inventaire général de la Villa Médicis à Rome, dressé en 1670.
C’est probablement cet exemplaire que vit François Girardon lors de son séjour dans la Ville Eternelle vers 1647-1650 et qui l’influença dans son OEuvre.
À la fin de sa vie, dans le but de préserver la mémoire de sa collection, Girardon, qui fut lui-même un grand collectionneur de sculptures antiques et modernes, fit graver par Nicolas Chevallier (1661-1720) une suite de dessins de ses oeuvres, présentes dans ses ateliers du Louvre, dessins qu’il demanda à René Charpentier (1680-1723), et qu’il fit placer dans des architectures fictives imaginées pour lui par l’architecte et ornemaniste Gilles-Marie Oppenord (1672-1742).
L’ensemble de cette anthologie fut intitulé Galerie de Girardon. Composé de treize planches dotées d’une échelle de 3 pieds permettant ainsi de mesurer approximativement la taille des oeuvres, ce remarquable florilège constitue aujourd’hui un document inestimable d’analyse de l’OEuvre de celui qui fut l’un des plus grands sculpteurs du règne de Louis XIV.
La terre cuite du Marsyas figure sur la planche IV de la Galerie de Girardon : « Veüe d’un des Cotéz de la Gallerie du Sr. Girardon Sculpteur ordinaire du Roi » (fig. 1).
Elle ne laisse aucun doute quant au modèle de notre bronze. Après la mort du sculpteur, cette oeuvre fit partie de la collection de Pierre-Jean Mariette, secrétaire du Roi et contrôleur général de la Grande Chancellerie de France, et fut vendue à Paris le 15 novembre 1775, dans sa vente après décès sous le lot n° 26 : « La Figure de Marsias suspendue par les deux mains à un tronc d’arbre,
faite avec beaucoup de soin d’après l’antique, par Girardon ».
Elle fut acquise 154 livres par un dénommé Pigache, et figura avec la même mention sous le n° 403 du catalogue de vente de la collection de ce dernier, qui se tint à Paris le 21 octobre 1776.
François Girardon fut l’un des plus éminents sculpteurs sous le règne de Louis XIV.
Il participa à de nombreux décors célèbres des jardins de Versailles, comme le groupe d’Apollon servi par les nymphes, le bassin de Saturne, la statue de l’Hiver, étonnant vieillard transi de froid avec un poêle à ses pieds, et surtout le fameux groupe de l’Enlèvement de Proserpine. Girardon exécuta son dernier grand chef-d’oeuvre à Paris avec la statue équestre en bronze de Louis XIV, dressée place Louis-le-Grand. Conçue à l’échelle de la place, actuelle place Vendôme, elle influencera toutes les statues équestres en France et en Europe.
Un exemplaire en bronze de même dimension que le nôtre est mentionné dans la vente après décès de Louis-François Crozat (1691-1750) le 14 décembre 1750 sous le n° 45 du catalogue : « Marsias attaché par les bras à un tronc d’arbre très-bien réparé d’après l’antique » de 23 pouces de haut (soit environ 60 centimètre de hauteur) ».
Ce bronze fut acheté alors par son frère cadet, Joseph-Antoine Crozat (1696-1751), marquis de Tugny, président au parlement de Paris, qui le plaça en son hôtel de Tugny, sis place Louis-le-Grand, actuelle place Vendôme, à Paris.
Le président de Tugny décéda dès l’année suivante, et le Marsyas fut en conséquence revendu au cours du mois de juin 1751, sous le lot n° 44 du catalogue: « Marsias attaché par les bras à un tronc d’arbre, Bronze d’après l’Antique.
La Figure a 23 pouces de haut ». Sa trace disparaît alors. Deux autres exemplaires provenant d’illustres collections privées,
attestant par la même la grande qualité du sujet, sont apparus récemment sur le marché de l’art.

RÉFÉRENCES BIBLIOGRAPHIQUES François Souchal, La Collection du Sculpteur Girardon d’après son inventaire après décès, Gazette des Beaux-arts, LXXXII, 1973, p. 51-52 François Souchal, French Sculptors of the 17th and 18th centuries, The reign of Louis XIV, G-L, éd. Cassirer, London, 1981, p. 80, fig. 119 Francis Haskell et Nicholas Penny, Taste and the Antique, New Haven and London, 1981, p. 262, cat. n° 59, fig. 136

Kohn. Mardi 2 juillet 2013. HÔTEL LE BRISTOL – SALON CASTELLANE 112 rue du Faubourg Saint Honoré– 75008 Paris.


Nymphe endormie. Attribuéà Ferdinando Tacca (1619-1686). Florence, milieu du XVIIe siècle

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Nymphe endormie. Attribuéà Ferdinando Tacca (1619-1686). Florence, milieu du XVIIe siècle. Photo courtesy Kohn

Bronze patiné. H. 19 cm (socle : H.6 cm), L. 34 cm, P. 15 cm. Estimation : 100 000 / 150 000 €

Le thème de la Nymphe endormie, parfois accompagnée d’un satyre fut créé par le bronzier et sculpteur des Médicis, Jean de Bologne avant 1584 afin de répondre à une commande du Grand-Duc de Toscane François Ier de Médicis désirant faire un cadeau à son frère le Cardinal Ferdinand.
Celle-ci était ainsi décrite : un bronze « d’une femme nue en train de dormir ».
Ce groupe réapparaît en 1588 dans l’inventaire de la Villa Médicis où est signalé : « deux petites figures de métal d’une Vénus endormie et d’un satyre la regardant sur une base de bois peinte en noir ».
Ce modèle connut un rapide succès et se diffusa dans toute l’Europe notamment dans les collections royales françaises où deux exemplaires sont mentionnés.
Le premier, attribuéà Antonio Susini, fut acquis par Louis XIV auprès du grand collectionneur Louis Hesselin en 1663, il porte le n° 37 des inventaires du Garde-meuble de la Couronne et est aujourd’hui conservé au Musée du Louvre.
Le second, conservé en main privée, inventorié en 1684 présente un satyre accompagnant la nymphe et fut attribué par certains à l’entourage de Susini et pour d’autres à Pietro Tacca (Les Bronzes de la Couronne, catalogue d’EXPOSITION, Paris, Musée du Louvre, avril-juillet 1999, p.98, n° 82).
L’Electeur de Saxe Christian Ier eut également un exemplaire d’Antonio Susini d’après Jean de Bologne avec la présence du satyre aux côtés de la jeune femme assoupie.
Ce bronze est aujourd’hui conservé au Musée de Dresde, mais un modèle tout à fait comparable est passé en ventes publiques en 2001 atteignant le prix de 798.000$, attestant de la rareté et de la grande qualité du modèle.

L’oeuvre que nous présentons diffère par certains détails des fontes de Jean de Bologne ou d’Antonio Susini, notamment dans le rendu des drapés, moins géométriques et dans le traitement des surfaces achevé avec un grand souci du détail mais sans le poli des œuvres associées au travail de Susini.
La couleur rouge cuivrée de la patine dénonce une fonte florentine et le rendu général de la scène indique une réalisation du milieu du XVIIe siècle.
On peut également signaler qu’au dessus de la cuisse droite de notre nymphe, il existe une cavité ronde qui laisse à penser qu’elle faisait office de réceptacle à un élément aujourd’hui disparu.
Autre détail : dans les fontes du début du XVIIe siècle, le dossier de la couche est souvent orné d’un masque mortuaire, d’un crâne ou d’une chauve-souris.
Or, c’est un chérubin qui est figuré sur notre oeuvre à cet endroit.
On peut établir un lien entre notre représentation de la Nymphe endormie et le Birène et Olympia attribuéà Ferdinando Tacca, conservé au Chicago Art Institute.
Cette parenté se retrouve notamment dans la structuration de la draperie et dans l’interprétation naturaliste de la composition originale de Bologne.
Le père de Ferdinando Tacca, Pietro, travailla de nombreuses années aux côtés de Jean de Bologne et aurait pu recevoir un modèle de la Nymphe endormie qu’il aurait alors transmise à son fils pour créer un nouveau groupe.

Kohn. Mardi 2 juillet 2013. HÔTEL LE BRISTOL – SALON CASTELLANE 112 rue du Faubourg Saint Honoré– 75008 Paris.

Bacchus. Attribuéà Pietro da Barga (actif à Florence entre 1574 et 1588), Italie, Florence, seconde moitié du XVIe siècle

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Bacchus. Attribuéà Pietro da Barga (actif à Florence entre 1574 et 1588), Italie, Florence, seconde moitié du XVIe siècle. Photo courtesy Kohn

Bronze doré. H. 21,5 cm, L. 8 cm, P. 6 cm. Estimation : 90 000 / 120 000 €

Un modèle similaire en bronze patiné est reproduit dans le catalogue de l’exposition Natur und Antike in der Renaissance, Austellung im Liebieghaus, Museum alter Plastik, Frankfurt am Main, du 5 décembre 1985 au 2 mars 1986, p.437-438, cat. n°135 Le jeune homme est présenté debout, le bras droit appuyé sur un tronc d’arbre, un léger déhanchement marqué par ce déséquilibre.
Il tient une grappe de raisins de la main droite et pose sa main gauche sur la hanche avec un air de nonchalance.
Il porte une cape attachée à l’épaule par un mufle de lion ne cachant rien de sa nudité.

Sa composition est inspirée d’une oeuvre de Praxitèle titrée Le Satyre au repos, unanimement admiré aux XVIe et XVIIe siècles grâce à une copie romaine conservée dans la collection Giustiniani (Rome, galerie Torlonia) que l’on trouve reproduit sous le titre de Faunus meditans dans le recueil publié par François Perrier en 1638 (pl. 45).
L’expositon Natur und Antike in der Renaissance qui s’est tenue à Frankfort en 1985-1986 présentait sous le numéro 135 un Bacchus de Pietro da Barga identique au nôtre, à l’exception de la patine brune (fig. 1).
Principalement connu pour ses oeuvres en bronze, Pietro da Barga travailla pour le Cardinal Ferdinando de Médicis qui lui commanda des réductions en fig.1 : Pietro da Barga, Bacchus, seconde moitié du XVIe siècle, bronze.
Collection particulière (reproduit dans le catalogue de l’exposition Natur und Antike in der Renaissance, Austellung im Liebieghaus, Museum alter Plastik, Frankfurt am Main, du 5 décembre 1985 au 2 mars 1986, p.437-438, cat. n°135) bronze de modèles antiques pour orner son Studiolo parmi lesquelles le groupe du Laocoon ou l’Hercule Farnèse.
Les archives des inventaires des Médicis le citent entre 1574 et 1588.
Parallèlement, il détenait une boutique de vente de petits bronzes fondus par Bastiano Tragittore. Sa compréhension sensible et subtile des antiques et la parfaite maîtrise de la sculpture et de la ciselure lui octroyèrent une grande renommée.

Le thème du Satyre au repos fut repris par de nombreux artistes avec des variantes dans la position du sujet ou dans la présence ou non du tronc d’arbre.
Un modèle est répertorié dans l’inventaire des Bronzes de la Couronne sous le n° 45 et décrit ainsi : « Un petit Bacchus debout, appuyé du bras droit sur un tronc d’arbre, haut de huit pouces, sur un piédestal d’ébène de six pouces de haut ».
Il fut commandé par Louis XIV en Italie en 1664 et fut enregistré dans le journal du Garde-meuble le 12 septembre 1669.
De nombreuses affinités existent entre notre statuette et le bronze du Louvre. A noter quelques différences notamment dans le traitement de la surface et la ciselure de la statuette.
D’autres exemplaires, de qualité variée, sont conservés dans diverses collections notamment au Kunsthistorisches de Vienne et au Bargello de Florence.
Notre statuette est le seul exemplaire en bronze doré connu à ce jour attribuable à Pietro da Barga qui utilisait généralement des patines vertes ou brunes et de la dorure uniquement en rehauts.

RÉFÉRENCE BIBLIOGRAPHIQUE: Natur und Antike in der Renaissance, catalogue de l’exposition, Austellung im Liebieghaus, Museum alter Plastik, Frankfurt am Main, du 5 décembre 1985 au 2 mars 1986, p.437-438, cat. n°135

Kohn. Mardi 2 juillet 2013. HÔTEL LE BRISTOL – SALON CASTELLANE 112 rue du Faubourg Saint Honoré– 75008 Paris.

Hercule. Attribué au Maître Ciechanowiecki. Allemagne (?), première moitié du XVIIe siècle

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Hercule. Attribué au Maître Ciechanowiecki. Allemagne (?), première moitié du XVIIe siècle. Photo courtesy Kohn

Bronze doré. H. 22 cm, L. 8 cm, P. 8 cm. H. total avec base : 34,5 cm. Estimation : 80 000 / 120 000 €

Cette statuette représentant Hercule apparaît marchant dans une nudité héroïque avec,
dans la main droite, l’une des pommes des Hespérides. Sa main gauche était sans doute pourvue à l’origine d’un objet, peut-être une massue. Debout sur une base en bronze, l’ensemble a été fondu d’une seule pièce et très finement ciselé.
Ce modèle montre des liens très forts avec un groupe de statuettes réalisées toutes par le même artiste dont le nom reste à ce jour anonyme, dénommé par Andrew Ciechanowiecki.
La critique lui a donné le nom de son découvreur, le Maître Ciechanowiecki.
Ce dernier fut également appelé, par erreur, le Maître de Fitzwilliam, en raison du prêt de certaines de ses oeuvres au musée de Cambridge.
La comparaison entre notre Hercule et deux autres statuettes du même thème et aux dimensions similaires permet de se rendre compte combien ces bronzes sont proches.
L’une d’elles, apparue il y a quelques années sur le marché de l’art londonien, présente Hercule, plus jeune et sans barbe. Sa pose est la même que celle de notre statuette avec quelques nuances dans les bras, la base finement ciselée est identique. Un autre modèle faisait partie de l’ancienne collection du Docteur Von Frey à Berlin.
Les points communs entre ces bronzes indiquent clairement une origine commune,
relevant du même atelier.
Les variations dans la composition n’affectent que les bras, la tête ou les attributs, mais le torse et les jambes restent dans les mêmes positions.
Ceci permet d’émettre l’hypothèse de l’utilisation de moules pour ces parties du corps par l’artiste anonyme qui créa ces statuettes.
L’identité réelle du Maître Ciechanowiecki a intrigué les historiens de l’art et les connaisseurs.
Certains des bronzes de ce groupe avaient été attribués à Adrian de Vries, à Vittore Camelio, ou à Francesco da Sant’ Agata. Plus récemment, Charles Avery avait proposé le nom d’un orfèvre Florentin, Manno di Sebastiano Sharri, tandis que Manfred Leithe-Jasper suggérait le cercle des orfèvres romains de la première moitié du XVIIe siècle, dans lequel l’artiste aurait pu exercer.
Cependant, il est peutêtre prématuré d’indiquer un nom pour cet artiste qui demeure encore mystérieux.
Il semble très vraisemblable, d’après ces données préliminaires, que le Maître avait une bonne connaissance des sculptures de Jean de Bologne et de certains de ses suiveurs d’Europe du Nord. Son goût pour les surfaces lisses et son approche évoquant le travail d’un joaillier renvoient au style des pays au nord des Alpes,
peut-être l’Allemagne ; la ville d’Augsbourg du XVIIe siècle semble en effet dans ce contexte l’endroit plausible pour rechercher l’identité du Maître Ciechanowiecki.

Kohn. Mardi 2 juillet 2013. HÔTEL LE BRISTOL – SALON CASTELLANE 112 rue du Faubourg Saint Honoré– 75008 Paris.

Luis Meléndez (Naples 1716 - 1780 Madrid), Still Life With Apricots And Cherries

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Luis Meléndez (Naples 1716 - 1780 Madrid), Still Life With Apricots And Cherries. Photo courtesy Sotheby's

oil on canvas; 38 by 49.6 cm.; 15 by 19 1/2 in. Estimate 1,000,000-1,500,000 GBP

PROVENANCE: Believed to have been in the possession of a Spanish noble family, Madrid, since at least the 1940s/50s;
From whom acquired by Rosendo Naseiro around thirty years ago. 

EXHIBITED: Madrid, A la sombra de Goya. Pinturas y artes decorativas en colecciones particulares, 1999, no. 37;
Dublin, National Gallery of Ireland, Luis Meléndez, Still Lifes, 16 June – 5 September 2004, no. 19;
Washington, National Gallery of Art (17 May – 23 August 2009); Los Angeles County Museum of Art (23 September 2009 – 3 January 2010); and Boston, Museum of Fine Arts (31 January – 9 May 2010), Luis Meléndez, Master of the Spanish Still Life, no. 9. 

LITTERATURE: Luis Meléndez, Still Lifes, exhibition catalogue, Dublin 2004, pp. 118-19, cat. no. 19, reproduced pp. 2 and 119;
P. Cherry, Luis Meléndez, Still Life Painter, Madrid 2006, pp. 148 & 547, cat. no. 120, reproduced p. 500;
Luis Meléndez, Master of the Spanish Still Life, exhibition catalogue, London 2009, pp. 80-82, cat. no. 9, reproduced

This beautiful Still Life of Apricots and Cherries is by one of the greatest European still life painters of the 18th century, Luis Meléndez, and in 2009/10 was included in an exhibition dedicated to the artist’s work held at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. The picture is a reduced variant of a painting (see Fig. 1) from the artist’s celebrated commission of some 44 still lifes produced for the Prince of Asturias (the future Charles IV of Spain) to adorn his cabinet of national history, a private museum in his quarters in the Royal Palace, Madrid, the majority of which are today in the Prado Museum.  

coupe_aux_armes_du_comte_von_scharffenberg_et_de_la_comtesse_von_1371116061726291__2_The Prince of Asturias series was painted by Meléndez in the years 1771-73, at a time of intense activity and creativity for the artist. The commission was by far the most significant within his career, comprising almost half of his known oeuvre, and in addition provided a rich repertoire of compositions and motifs that the artist would revise and reuse in many of his subsequent paintings. In the case of the present work, Meléndez created a smaller variant of the Royal ‘prototype’, adapting his original design from a standardised medium canvas (42 by 63 cm.) to a smaller one (37 by 50 cm.), thereby necessitating a number of changes to the composition. Whilst the overall mise-en-scène is broadly similar the artist has changed entirely the arrangement of the apricots within the bowl as well as the design and disposition of the sprigs of fruit that radiate in a fan shape from the bowl. Indeed the only elements of the composition that directly repeat the Prince of Asturias picture are the group of three cherries on the left of the ledge and the motif of the three apricots to the right of the bowl (although even here, some of the leaves have been altered).

The practice of painting a variant of a work from the Prince of Asturias ‘master series’ is not uncommon in Meléndez’s work, as demonstrated by the existence of a number of other such examples, including the artist’s Still Life of Bream with Oranges and Still Life with Partridges, both in the Masaveu Collection that each derive from paintings from the royal series today in the Prado.1

Technical analysis carried out to the present work prior to its inclusion in the 2009/10 Meléndez exhibition revealed that, in keeping with other pictures in the artist’s oeuvre, the canvas was prepared with a double priming, each layer of a slightly different reddish hue and the top one made up of finer particles. The artist seems to have painted the still life elements first, leaving the background in reserve, as attested by areas of ground that can be seen around the contours of some of the fruit. A lighter, more greyish colour was then applied over the darker background to create a variable atmospheric effect. As pointed out by Dr. Peter Cherry, Meléndez almost certainly painted the present work in 1773, whilst the royal picture was still in his studio, although the tonality of the background may have been altered later. 

The Rosendo Naseiro Collection
bacchus_attribue_pietro_da_barga_actif_florence_entre_1574_et_1588_1371116297529357bacchus_attribue_pietro_da_barga_actif_florence_entre_1574_et_1588_1371116299385339__2_During the second half of the 20th century, Rosendo Naseiro, in whose ownership the present work has been for some thirty years, assembled one of the greatest private collections of Spanish still life painting ever known. The collection was remarkable both for its outstanding quality but also its encyclopaedic range, covering from the dawn of Spanish still life painting around 1600 until the late 19thcentury. The particular focus of the collection was still life painting from the Spanish Golden Age and this period was represented by a number of masterpieces by artists including Juan van der Hamen, Juan Fernández, called El Labrador, Juan de Espinosa, Juan de Arellano, Tomás Hiepes and Pedro de Camprobín. In 2006 a group of forty works from the Naseiro Collection was acquired for the Prado and substantially enriched the museum’s existing still life collection. The jewel in the crown was Juan van der Hamen’s celebrated Still Life with Artichokes, Flowers and Glassware (see Fig. 2) and the group also included an outstanding work by Luis Meléndez, of similar size to the present work, representing A Bowl of Blackberries in a Landscape (see Fig. 3).

1. See the exhibition catalogue, Luis Meléndez, Bodegones, Madrid, Museo del Prado, 17 February – 16 April 2004, p. 231, cat. no. 39, reproduced p. 233 & p. 219, cat. no. 33, reproduced p. 221.

Sotheby's. Old Master & British Paintings Evening Sale. London | 03 juil. 2013- www.sothebys.com

Workshop of Giuseppe Arcimboldo (Milan 1527-1593), The Four Seasons: Anthropomorphic Allegories Composed of Fruits and Plants

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Workshop of Giuseppe Arcimboldo (Milan 1527-1593), The Four Seasons: Anthropomorphic Allegories Composed of Fruits and Plants. Photo courtesy Sotheby's

Summer bears signature and date on the collar: GIVSEPPE/ ARCIMBOLDO / 1573Winter emblazened on the shoulder with the two crossed swords of Meissen, the coat-of-arms of the Saxe family; a set of four, all oil on canvas, each: 75 by 61 cm.; 29 1/2 by 24 in. Estimate 300,000-500,000 GBP

PROVENANCE: Probably Elizabeth of Bohemia, the Winter Queen (1598-1622), daughter of James I and consort of the Elector Palatine Frederick V, who may have taken the pictures with her when she fled Prague in 1620, subsequently returning to England on the accession of her nephew Charles II;
Presumably donated by Elizabeth to William, Lord Craven (1608-1697);
By descent and inheritance to Cornelia, Countess of Craven (née Martin), wife of the 4th Earl Craven, Hamstead Marshall;
By descent until anonymously sold, ('The Property of a Gentleman'), London, Sotheby's, 27 November 1963, lot 87, where purchased by Reeve for £10,500 (as Giuseppe Arcimboldo);
The Hon. Colin Tennant (1926-2010), later 3rd Baron Glenconner;
By whom sold, London, Sotheby's, 11 July 1973, lot 42, for £30,000, where acquired by the present owner (as Giuseppe Arcimboldo).
 
LITTERATURE: S. Alfons, "Giuseppe Arcimboldo", in Tidskrift for Konstvetenskap 31, Malmo 1957, p. 41;
F.C. Legrand and F. Sluys, Arcimboldo et les Arcimboldesques, Aalter 1955, pp. 52-53 (as by Arcimboldo);

T. DaCosta Kauffmann, 'Arcimboldo au Louvre', in La Revue du Louvre et des Musées de France, XXVII, 5/6, 1977, pp. 337-38; Winter and Summer reproduced p. 340 (as copies after the Louvre set);
The Arcimboldo Effect, exhibition catalogue, Milan 1987, p. 109, all reproduced in colour, as formerly in the Cornelia collection (as Giuseppe Arcimboldo. The provenance given is most likely a typographical error and should have been listed as Cornelia Craven collection, see above);
V. Delieuvin in S. Ferino-Pagden (ed.), Arcimboldo 1526-1593, exhibition catalogue, Milan 2007, p.134 under cat. no. IV. 8 (as versions of the Louvre set).
 
NOTE: Milanese by birth, Giuseppe Arcimboldo found huge fame and success at the courts of Vienna and Prague for his unusual anthropomorphic designs such as the present set of four Seasons. Celebrated for their wit and artifice, the composite heads were much imitated in the artist’s lifetime and his idiosyncratic style arguably makes him the most modern sixteenth-century painter, whose work continued to resonate with artists well into the twentieth century, particularly with the Surrealists and Salvador Dalí. 
 
There are several versions of the sets of seasons which are considered autograph. The first set, which is on a panel support and of which only Summer and Winter remain, is dated 1563 and is today in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.1 The shoulder of Winter is emblazoned with the letter 'M' in honour of the emperor Maximilan II, for whom they were painted. A second set, dated 1573, is in the Musée du Louvre in Paris and it is from this second set that the present workshop versions derive.2 In the 2007-08 monographic exhibition dedicated to the artist in Paris and in Vienna they were discussed in some detail under the catalogue entry for the Paris set, and their quality praised. A second workshop set with the arms of Saxony is listed as formerly in the collection of the dukes of Schleswig-Holstein in Gottorg, Germany, though this is untraced, so the present works would appear to be the only complete set.3
 
Apart from the date of execution which differs by one decade, there are differences in some of the details between the Vienna and Paris sets, the most noticeable change being that the ‘M’ on the shoulder of Winter has been replaced by the crossed swords of Meissen, the Saxon coat-of-arms. Maximilian commissioned Arcimboldo to produce the Paris set to thank Augustus, Elector of Saxony, for his political support, and the artist is recorded as having received payment for the set from Maximilian in 1574. The Protestant Augustus had spent time at the Catholic court of Maximilian to ensure his position as elector despite the political manoeuvring of his cousin, Johan Wilhelm of Saxony-Weimar. When Maximilian gave Augustus his backing, the latter returned the political favour by electing Rudolf II, Maximilian's son, as heir to the throne. 
 
While the compositions can be enjoyed for their artistic merit alone, they should also be read as flattering political allegories representing Maximilian’s harmonious rule over all the Seasons, and by extension over all his people. The inclusion of the Saxon arms on Winter thereby transfers the political reference from the Habsburgs to the house of Wettin; the allegories make explicit that under the peaceful and successful management of these rulers, such disparate elements and competing forces can be brought together to form a coherent whole. 
 
The pictures are thought to have been brought over to England by Elizabeth of Bohemia, also known as the Winter Queen, who would presumably have acquired them while she was living in Prague. Elizabeth is thought to have given the paintings to her political ally and loyal supporter William Craven, in whose family the pictures remained until their sale in these Rooms in 1963 (see Provenance). Craven is thought to have commissioned the building of Ashdown House in Berkshire so that Elizabeth might leave the pestilential air of London but she died before the house was complete. The contents of the house were sold in these Rooms, 29 October 2010.
 
1. See Die Gemäldegalerie des Kunsthistorischen Museums in Wien, p. 24, reproduced plate 109. 
2. See S. Ferino-Pagden, Arcimboldo, exhibition catalogue, Milan 2007, pp. 134-40, cat. nos. IV.8-11, all reproduced in colour. The floral border which frames each of the Louvre pictures was added later.
3. Idem, p. 134, under cat. no. IV.8. A compositionally different workshop set is in Trasnitz Castle in Landshut, on deposit from the Bayerishe Staatsgemäldesammlungen in Munich, but the set cannot be considered complete since only three are displayed due to the parlous condition of Autumn (see Ferino-Pagden, op. cit., pp. 140-44, cat. nos. IV. 12-14, reproduced in colour).
 
Sotheby's. Old Master & British Paintings Evening Sale. London | 03 juil. 2013- www.sothebys.com

New show at Cantor Arts Center chronicles evolution of French master drawings

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Henri-Joseph Hesse, Portrait of a Man, 1811. Brush with brown ink and white heightening over traces of black chalk on beige wove paper. 9 1/4 x 7 5/8 inches. Archer M. Huntington Museum Fund, 1987, 1987.19. The Blanton Museum of Art.

STANFORD, CA.- Aspiring painters in 17th- and 18th-century France dreamed of studying at Paris’s Académie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture (Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture), one of the leading cultural institutions of the time. Instructors at the Académie emphasized the importance of life drawing, because mastery of the human figure was a vital skill for the successful painter. The Cantor Arts Center presents a selection of important drawings from the Renaissance and the 17th and18th centuries, when the influence of the Académie was at its peak, as well as some exemplary non-academic works from the 19th century, in “Storied Past: Four Centuries of French Drawings from the Blanton Museum of Art.” The show runs July 3 through September 22.

The Blanton, located at the University of Texas at Austin, organized the exhibition of 55 drawings primarily from its Suida-Manning collection. “Storied Past” chronicles the development of drawing in France from 1500 to 1900, a period of rapid innovation, tumultuous social revolutions and striking changes in artistic styles. Specifically, the exhibition explores the evolution of narrative subjects favored by the French tradition, as well as artists’ changing engagement with materials and techniques. 

Strongly represented are 17th- and 18th-century drawings, which range from gestural sketches to more finished compositions. These drawings were not only the products of the Académie’s life-drawing classes, but also its lectures on religious, classical and mythological subject matter. The exhibition also highlights 19th- and early 20th-century works by draftsmen who reacted against the academic tradition. These artists deliberately took a more realist approach in their visual style and choice of subjects, and chose to render scenes of everyday life so as to communicate the social, economic, and political changes that were transforming modern France. 

Strongly represented are 17th- and 18th-century drawings, which range from gestural sketches to more finished compositions. These drawings were not only the products of the Académie’s life-drawing classes, but also its lectures on religious, classical and mythological subject matter. The exhibition also highlights 19th- and early 20th-century works by draftsmen who reacted against the academic tradition. These artists deliberately took a more realist approach in their visual style and choice of subjects, and chose to render scenes of everyday life so as to communicate the social, economic, and political changes that were transforming modern France. 

Showcased are drawings by famously talented draftsmen—among them Nicolas Lancret (1690–1743), François Boucher (1703–1770), Jean-Baptiste Greuze (1725–1805), Théodore Rousseau (1812–1867) and Théophile-Alexandre Steinlen (1859–1923). Apart from exploring the expressive and technical range of French drawing, the exhibition presents new research by curators and conservators about individual works’ histories, issues of connoisseurship and sheds light on drawing as an intellectual process. 

Cantor Curator Elizabeth Kathleen Mitchell speaks about the drawings on view in “Storied Past” on Thursday, July 18 at 5:30 p.m. In addition, an installation of French works on paper from the Cantor’s collection, selected by Mitchell, complements “Storied Past.” The Cantor also presents four other exhibitions of French art this summer, from 16th-century representations of Fontainebleau to 19th- and 20th-century prints by Edouard Manet (1832–1883), Odilon Redon (1840–1916) and Henri Matisse (1869–1954). 

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Circle of Daniel Halle, A Warrior amid Classical Ruins, c. 1650-99, Black chalk and brown wash heightened with white on brown laid paper, 15 1/2 x 11", Blanton Museum of Art. The Suida-Manning Collection.

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Attributed to Étienne Allegrain, A Classical Landscape, c. 1700, Pen and brown ink, brown wash heightened with white, laid down on card, 11 x 16 in., Blanton Museum of Art. The Suida-Manning Collection.

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François Boucher, Mucius Scaevola Putting His Hand, in the Fire, c. 1726-28, Black and white chalks on blue antique laid paper, laid down, 18 3/8 x 14 15/16", Blanton Museum of Art. The Suida-Manning Collection.

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Charles-Joseph Natoire, “Neptune and Amphitrite,” ca. 1730s, black chalk with brush and brown wash and white heightening on blue laid paper, 9 7/16 x 14 9/16 in. Blanton Museum of Art, The Suida-Manning Collection

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Charles-Antoine Coypel, France Thanking Heaven for the Recovery of Louis XV, 1744. Black and white chalks with brush and gray wash and touches of red chalk on cream antique laid paper. 11 15/16 x 7 7/8 inches. Blanton Museum of Art, Suida-Manning Collection.

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Francois Boucher, “Three Putti Among Clouds,” ca. 1750, black, red, and white chalk on paper. Cantor Arts Center, Committee for Art Acquisitions Fund, 1974.204

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Jean-Baptiste Greuze, The Arms of a Girl Holding a Bird, circa 1765.Red chalk on cream laid paper, laid down. The Suida-Manning Collection. Blanton Museum of Art.

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Attributed to Etienne Jeaurat, Three Women, Two with Baskets, c. 1770, Black and white chalk on gray laid paper, 7 1/4 x 9", Blanton Museum of Art. The Suida-Manning Collection.

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Anonymous, Noah Leading the Animals into the Ark, after Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione, circa 1780. Brush with colored oils on antique laid paper, laid down. 15 5/8 x 21 3/4 inches. The Suida-Manning Collection. The Blanton Museum of Art.

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Barthélemy-Joseph-Fulcran Roger, “Psyche Abandoned,” 1805, charcoal and black chalk on paper. Cantor Arts Center, Committee for Art Acquisitions Fund, 1988.31.

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Théodore Rousseau, A Marshy River Landscape, circa 1845. Charcoal heightened with white chalk on pink laid paper. 9 3/16 x 16 15/16 inches. Gift of Mr. E. Wyllys Andrews IV, Charles and Dorothy Clark, Alvin and Ethel Romansky, and the children of L. M. Tonkin, and University purchase, by exchange, 2006. Blanton Museum of Art.

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Alexandre-Louis Leloir, Moroccan Girl Playing a Stringed Instrument, 1875, Watercolor, gouache, and graphite on ivory wove paper, 9 5/8 x 13 9/16 in., Blanton Museum of Art. Gift of the Wunsch Foundation, Inc., 1983.

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Théophile Alexandre Steinlen, À l’atelier, c. 1895.Graphite on wove paper, 11 1/2 x 6 5/8 in. Blanton Museum of Art. Gift of Alvin and Ethel Romansky, 1978.

VAN CLEEF & ARPELS. Important bracelet souple

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VAN CLEEF & ARPELS. Important bracelet souple. Photo courtesy Artcurial

en or jaune formé d'un large ruban bombé, orné d'une ligne de 14 rubis entourés de diamants taillés en brillant entre deux rangées de motifs ornés chacun, en serti clos, de 4 diamants ou de quatre rubis ronds. Signé Van Cleef et Arpels. Poinçon du joaillier 23720. Long. : 21,5 cm. Poids brut : 106,9 g. Poids de chacun des 14 rubis : env. 1.60 ct - Estimation 70 000 - 90 000 €

AN IMPORTANT RUBY, DIAMOND AND YELLOW GOLD BRACELET BY VAN CLEEF & ARPELS 

Artcurial. Hôtel Hermitage, Monte-Carlo. 23 Jul 2013 14:30 - http://www.artcurial.com


Master of the Brandon Portrait (Active in Bruges and England circa 1510 – 1530), Portrait of Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffol

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Master of the Brandon Portrait (Active in Bruges and England circa 1510 – 1530), Portrait of Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk (c. 1484-1545). Photo courtesy Sotheby's

oil on panel; 57.8 by 46.4 cm.; 22 3/4 by 18 1/4 in. Estimate 100,000-150,000 GBP

PROVENANCE: Henry Rawdon-Hastings, 4th Marquess of Hastings (1842-1868), Donington Hall, Leicestershire, who lent the picture to the National Portraits exhibition in 1866;
By inheritance to his sister, Edith Rawdon-Hastings, 10th Countess of Loudoun (1833-1874), who married Charles Frederick Clifton, later Abney-Hastings, 1st Baron Donington (1822-1895);
By descent to their son, Charles Edward Hastings Rawdon-Hastings, 11th Earl of Loudoun and 2nd Baron Donington (1855-1920), Donington Hall, Leicestershire; 
By whom bequeathed to his niece, Edith Maud Rawdon-Hastings, 12th Countess Loudoun (1883-1960);
With Norbert Fischman, London, by 1960.

EXHIBITED: London, South Kensington Museum, The First Special Exhibition of National Portraits Ending with the Reign of King James the Second, April 1866, no. 71 (as 'Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham, K.G., by Hans Holbein');
Derby, Fine Arts Exhibition, 1870, no. 6 (as Hans Holbein);
London, The New Gallery, Exhibition of the Royal House of Tudor, 1890, no. 42 (as 'Edward Stafford by Hans Holbein');
Manchester, Exhibition of the Royal House of Tudor, 1897, no. 136 (as 'Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham, K.G., by Hans Holbein').

LITTERATURE: P. Ganz, 'A Portrait of Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, by "The Master of Queen Mary Tudor"', in The Burlington Magazine, vol. LXX, no. 410, May 1937, pp. 205-07, 210-11 (as The Master of Queen Mary Tudor);
M.J. Friedländer, 'Ein Vlämischer Portraitmaler in England', in Gentsche Bijdragen tot de Kunstgeschiedenis, vol. IV, 1937, pp. 5-18 (as The Master of the Brandon Portrait);
A. Bury, 'Round About the Galleries', in Connoisseur, vol. CXLIII, May 1959, p. 247, reproduced in colour p. 255;
R. Strong, Tudor & Jacobean Portraits, London 1969, vol. I, pp. 305-6;
N. Toussaint, 'Le Maître des Portraits Brandon', in B. de Patoul and R. Van Schoute,Les Primitifs flamands et leur temps, Belgium 1994, pp. 514-515 (as Maître des Portraits Brandon);
M. Ainsworth, Gerard David: Purity of Vision in an Age of Transition, New York 1998, pp. 36-8, 53, nts. 7, 54 and nts. 54-56 (as The Master of the Brandon Portrait);
A. van Suchtelen, ''Niet minder mooi en niet minder zeldzaam en waardevol': de Meester van het brandon-portret en het Portret van een man met een Simson-medaille,' in Face Book; Studies on Dutch and Flemish Portraiture of the 16th-18th Centuries, Leiden 2012, pp. 15-22, reproduced in colour p. 17, fig. 2.

NOTE: A man of enormous stature and a distinguished soldier, a leading figure at the court of Henry VIII, and at one point brother-in-law to the King; Charles Brandon was the son of Sir William Brandon (d.1485) and his wife Elizabeth Bruyn (d.1494). His father was killed at the Battle of Bosworth, bearing Henry VII’s standard, and the manner of his death ensured that his son was brought up in the Royal Household, at the very epicentre of the Tudor Court. As a young man he was one of a small group of close companions of the young Prince Henry, later King Henry VIII and by 1505-6 was included among the King’s spears, a group of martial young gallants active in tournaments and courtly display. On Henry VIII’s succession to the throne, Brandon was appointed an esquire to the King, and performed as one of the six challengers at the coronation tournament in 1509, where he competed in all gilt armour. By 1513 he was being recognised by contemporaries as the King’s principal favourite, the only participant dressed identically to Henry in court revels, and appearing in jousts as the King’s sole partner in challenging the rest of the court. In 1510 he succeeded his uncle as Marshal of the King’s Bench, and in 1511 he was appointed Marshal of the King’s household. Elected a Knight of the Garter in 1513 and created Viscount Lisle in May that year, when Henry invaded France in the autumn, Brandon was appointed High Marshal of the army, and led the vanguard of the King’s ward. He distinguished himself as a formidable military presence at the sieges of Thérouanne and Tournai, leading the successful assault on the city gates at the latter, as well as at the Battle of the Spurs. On 1stFebruary 1514 he was created Duke of Suffolk in recognition of his service and in the summer of 1514 led an embassy to Paris, where he took a leading role in in the jousts and festivities surrounding the coronation of Henry VIII’s sister Mary Tudor as Queen of France, following her marriage to Louis XII as the seal on peace negotiations. In January the following year he was back in France following Louis’s death, charged with escorting Mary back to England and negotiating her dowry settlement.  Whilst in France Mary and Brandon fell in love and were married in secret without Henry’s permission. The King’s displeasure was soon mollified however and in 1520 Brandon played a prominent role alongside Henry in the jousting at the Field of the Cloth of Gold. Royal favour persisted and in 1523, after the peace treaty had broken down, it was Brandon who led the King’s army victoriously into France, striking all the way to Prémont in eastern Picardy. In 1536, with the fall of Anne Boleyn, Henry’s senior councillors gained a renewed prominence and Brandon was once again at the forefront of national affairs when he was appointed to suppress the religions uprising known as The Pilgrimage of Grace. A key figure in the increasingly well-defined Privy Council, unlike so many of Henry’s other councillors who fell so spectacularly from grace, Brandon remained a close intimate of the King’s for the rest of his life. In 1545, following Brandon's death on 24thAugust, he was buried by Royal decree in St. George’s Chapel, Windsor. 

Having previously been thought to be a portrait of Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham by Hans Holbein, and exhibited as such on several occasions in the nineteenth century, this painting came to the attention of scholars in the 1930s. Paul Ganz, writing in 1937 (op.cit), identified the sitter as Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk on the basis of comparison with the physiognomy in two known portraits of Brandon then in English collections.1 One of these was a portrait Ganz attributed to Holbein (ex Lord Donnington, destroyed circa 1939-45), of which there is a version in the National Portrait Gallery. The other, more tellingly, was the double portrait of Brandon and his wife (believed to be his third wife, Mary Tudor) the best known version of which is in the collection of the Duke of Bedford (Woburn Abbey, Bedfordshire). In the latter of these, not only does the physiognomy correspond closely to that in the present painting, but the sitter wears the same gold medallion in his hat, engraved with an allegorical subject and the motto ‘je tiens… en sa cord…’. The Woburn Abbey portrait, now attributed to Jan Gossaert, was engraved by George Vertue in 1748 and its provenance can be traced back to Brandon himself.2 Both these paintings depict the sitter in later life, but in all three portraits the Duke wears the Garter Collar and Great George, and is distinguished by his square cut beard, solid build and prominent nose. Identifying four other portraits by the same unknown hand, two of which were believed to represent Mary Tudor, Ganz dubbed the artist The Master of Queen Mary Tudor.

016L13033_6Z2QW_comp_AWorking independently the German scholar Max J. Friedländer published an article in the same year that offered a more convincing argument for the paintings authorship; one that has come to be widely accepted by modern scholars. Friedländer connected the portrait to a preparatory drawing for the head of a man from circa 1512-1515 in the Cabinet du Dessins, Musée du Louvre, Paris (fig. 1, left), drawn on the reverse of a Study of Four Girl’s Heads and Two Hands. The drawing had originally formed part of a sketchbook containing six sheets (known as the Klinkosch sketchbook, which was unbound and the pages dispersed in 1889), which Friedländer suggested were all the work of a follower of Gerard David (c.1460-1523), renaming the artist of all the assembled drawings the Master of the Brandon Portrait on the basis of the association with this painting. The attribution of the so-called Klinkosch drawings has been much debated and it is now accepted that the majority of the drawings are by David himself.3 Most recently, however, Ariane van Suchtelen, writing in 2012 in relation to this portrait and echoing Ainsworth and Lugt,4 has suggested that, whilst the Study of Four Girl’s Heads and Two Hands on the recto of the Louvre sheet is certainly the work of David, theStudy for the Head of a Man on the verso is the work of another hand, probably an artist working in David’s studio, or closely associated with it.5 

016L13033_6Z2QW_comp016L13033_6Z2QW_comp_BWhatever the attribution of the Klincosch drawings, it seems likely that Friedländer’s suggestion – that the artist he called the Master of the Brandon Portrait was probably a follower of Gerard David working in England – is correct. Friedländer attributed a further five portraits to the master, all of which are executed in a South Netherlandish style very close to that of David. In Suchtelen’s most recent article five portraits are given to the master, including the present painting, as well as aPortrait of Edward Stafford,  Duke of Buckingham (ex. Sotheby’s, 6 July 1983, lot 5, see fig. 2, right above), a Portrait of a young man with a Sampson Medal (Mauritshuis, The Hague), and a Portrait of John Bourchier, 1st Baron Berners (National Portrait Gallery, London), together with another portrait of the same sitter (Private Collection, Scotland, see fig. 3, right below). All these portraits express a similar calm dignity and are characterised both by the neat manner of their execution and the striking use of light in the modelling of the sitters’ heads. The two examples illustrated here also show striking similarities in both pose and dress.

Friedländer proposed three possible identifications for the anonymous master, all artists working in London in the third decade of the fifteenth century. The first two were Lucas Hornebout (1490/95-1544) and his father Gerard Hornebout (1465-1541), court painter and illuminator to Margaret of Austria (1480-1530), who worked in Ghent and Antwerp before coming to England at the age of nearly 60. The elder Hornebout’s name appears in accounts from Henry VIII’s household from 1528 to 1531, however he appears to have been primarily a miniature painter. The more likely suggestion is Jan Rav (fl. 1530s-40s), also known by the Latinised form Johannes Corvus. Rav entered the Bruges painters’ corporation in 1512, was living in England by circa 1530, and is said to have been connected with the Brandon household. A portrait of Brandon’s wife Mary Tudor, Duchess of Suffolk (Sudeley Castle, Gloucestershire), Dowager Queen of France and sister of Henry VIII, was once inscribed in Latin on the frame Joannes Corvus Flandrus Faciebat (John Raven of Flanders did this), and it is generally accepted that this artist can also be identified with the ‘Jehan Raf, peintre de Flandres’ who executed a map of England in 1532 and a ‘pourtraict de la ville de Londres’ in 1534 (destroyed) for Francis I of France, as well as the ‘John Raven born in Flanders’ who was granted denizenship in London in 1544.6

The present portrait was probably painted circa 1530, when Brandon was about 45 years old. He is depicted richly dressed in silk shirt, cloth of gold doublet and expensive fur lined cloak. In keeping with northern portraiture conventions his left hand rests on a parapet where the picture meets the base of the frame, thereby heightening the impression that he occupies three-dimensional space. The artist has combined strong directional lighting with a cool monochrome background typical of Netherlandish portraiture of the period. The shadows which line the left and upper edge of the panel create the pictorial illusion that they are cast by the frame itself, thus suggesting that the sitter is seen as if through an aperture. 

Dendrochronology Report:  
Analysis of the tree-ring sequences of this panel has identified that the 2 boards of this panel were derived from different trees, both sourced from the eastern Baltic, which were still growing in 1486. A standard estimate for missing sapwood therefore indicates that these boards are likely to have been felled between circa1494 and circa 1526. A full copy of the dendrochronology report by Ian Tyers is available upon request from the department and will be supplied to the buyer.

1. P. Ganz, op.cit. 
2. The identification was questioned by Strong in 1969 (op.cit), however the presence of the medallion in the sitter’s hat, as well as the closeness of the physiognomy appear to be fairly conclusive. The identification was accepted by Ainsworth in 1998 and Suchtelen in 2012.
3. See M. Ainsworth, op.cit, p. 53, nt. 7. 
4. See M. Ainsworth, op.cit, p. 37, and F. Lugt, Inventaire general des dessins desécoles du nord: Maîtres des anciens Pays-Bas nés avant 1550, Paris 1968, p. 20. 
5. A. van Suchtelen, op.cit
6. M. Edmond, Jan Rav, Grove Dictionary of Art (Oxford Art Online), 2007-2013.

Sotheby's. Old Master & British Paintings Evening Sale. London | 03 juil. 2013, 07:00 PM - www.sothebys.com

Corneille de Lyon, Portrait of a Lady, said to be Marie de Batarny

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Corneille de Lyon (The Hague 1500/10 - 1575 Lyon), Portrait of a Lady, said to be Marie de Batarny, half length, wearing black with white sleeves and a black bonnet. Photo courtesy Sotheby's

oil on panel, in a tabernacle frame; 19.4 by 14.7 cm.; 7 5/8 by 5 3/4 in. Estimate: 100,000-150,000 GBP. Lot sold 110,500 GBP

PROVENANCE: The Hon. Mr. Irby, Florence, 1836 (his collector's label affixed to the reverse, no. 84), as by Hans Holbein;
Thence by descent to George Irby, 6th Baron Boston (1860-1941), Hedsor Lodge, Buckinghamshire;
Marcus Kappel, Berlin, by 1910;
Anonymous sale, London, Christie's, 23 March 1973, lot 66, for £11,000;
Bequeathed by Dr. Rau to the Foundation of the German Committee for UNICEF.

LITTERATURE: W.C. Agee, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. A guide to the Collection, Houston 1981, p. 46, reproduced (the set of three);
A. Dubois de Groër, Corneille de la Haye dit Corneille de Lyon, Paris 1996, pp. 223-224, cat. no. 142, reproduced. 

NOTE: This was one of a group of four portraits by Corneille de Lyon that were in the collection of Marcus Kappel in Berlin in 1910. The other three were portraits of René de Batarnay, Count of Bouchage, and his wife Isabelle of Savoy and his daughter Marie, later the wife of Guillaume II, Vicomte de Joyeuse. The portrait of René de Batarnay is known in two versions; in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and in the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, Texas.1 The identity of the sitter is confirmed by its likeness to an anonymous chalk drawing of the same sitter today in the Hermitage in St. Petersburg. The portraits of his presumed wife and daughter are also in Houston, and a second version of the latter's likeness is also to be found in the Musée Mayer van den Bergh in Antwerp.2 It is unclear why the present portrait has been identified as Marie de Batarnay; the likeness does not compare with the more rounded features in the Antwerp and Houston panels, and the dimensions are also quite different, so it is unlikely to have originally come from the same set. The costumes of the other Batarnay portraits all date to around 1535-40, while as Dubois de Groer notes, that of this portrait dates to circa 1560.

 Marcus Kappel (1839-191) was a wealthy German banker and businessman and a considerable collector and patron of the arts. Having made his fortune in the grain trade, he then built his collection with the advice of Wilhelm von Bode, concentrating on Dutch and Flemish 17th century works and the work of the 19th century painter Adolph Menzel. The collection was displayed in his house 'Oberlichtsaal' in the Tiergartenstrasse in Berlin, where it was hung by Von Bode himself along the lines of the new Berlin  Museum. The paintings numbered works by or attributed to Pieter Claesz., Willem Claesz. Heda,  Gerrit Dou, Adriaen van Ostade, Jan Steen (three examples) and Simon de Vlieger, including, for example, Gabriel Metsu's Girl holding an apple of 1661-3 (Metropolitan Museum, New York) and Rubens' oil sketch of The Family of Rubens (Philadelphia, John G. Johnson Collection).

1. Dubois de Groër, op. cit., 1996, pp. 181-182, cat. nos. 80 and 80A, reproduced. The New York panel measures 16.5 x 14.5 cm., and that in Houston 17.8 x 14.4 cm.
2. Idem.,pp. 140-141, cat. nos. 140, 141 and 141A, reproduced. The two Houston panels measure 16.7 x 13.8 cm. and 16.7 x 13.7 cm. respectively, and that in Antwerp 16.5 x 13.9 cm. The author notes however that the likeness of the Comtesse does not fit well with a portrait drawing supposedly of the same sitter in the Hermitage (cf. L. Dimier, Histoire de la peinture de portrait en France au XVI siècle, Paris 1924-26, vol. III, p. 62, no. 42).

Sotheby's. Old Master & British Paintings Evening Sale. London | 03 juil. 2013, 07:00 PM - www.sothebys.com

Christoffel Van Den Berghe, Tulips, roses, narcissi, daffodils, crocuses, an iris, a poppy and other flowers...

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Christoffel Van Den Berghe (Active in Middelburg circa 1617-1628), Tulips, roses, narcissi, daffodils, crocuses, an iris, a poppy and other flowers in a gilt mounted porcelain vase on a ledge, with a queen of Spain fritillary, a white ermine and a magpie butterfly. Photo courtesy Sotheby's

oil on copper; 30.7 by 20.5 cm.; 12 1/8 by 8 1/8 in. Estimate 250,000-350,000 GBP. Lot sold: 626,500 GBP

PROVENANCE: Anonymous sale, London, Christie's, 17 December 1999, lot 9 (as Circle of Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder);
With Richard Green, London, from whom acquired by a private collector;
Anonymous sale ('Property of a Private Collector'), New York, Sotheby's, 23 January 2003, lot 39 (as Van den Berghe) for $290,000, where acquired by the late father of the present owner.

NOTE: Van den Berghe’s importance within the sphere of Dutch still life painting has been long-recognised but it is perhaps due to the scarcity of still lifes by him (less than ten are known) that he remains a much-overlooked figure in the birth and rise in popularity of the genre at the beginning of the 17th century. This would appear to be Van den Berghe’s earliest work, earlier even than the 1618-dated copper in the John G. Johnson collection that is both his best-known and his most Bosschaert-ian.1  Bol surmised that Van den Berghe must surely have seen Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder’s earlier works in his home town of Middelburg, a supposition which seems almost certain, and proposes that he might have been Bosschaert’s pupil. Bosschaert left Middelburg in 1614 and the likeness in palette and execution of both the Johnson copper and the present still life to early Middelburg-period Bosschaerts is undeniable. In this painting the artist has in fact borrowed the yellow and red tulip (upper right) from a 1608-dated Bosschaert.2 The globular porcelain vase recalls that of Bosschaert’s earliest dated bouquet from 1605.

While the pert, elongated tulips here show a marked similarity with those of the Johnson picture their execution in this latter is a little smoother and this, as Fred Meijer has pointed out, argues in favour of an earlier dating for the present work, probably by just a year or two, to circa 1616-17. Both works are set against dark backgrounds illuminated by an even, bright light, and share a similar density. The coloring, too, is very comparable, with white and strong yellow accents, interspaced by reds, and both share the single dark blue flower embedded rather prominently in the lower half of each arrangement. On its own, the extraordinary condition of this painting permits a close scrutiny of Van den Berghe’s early technique while the sculptural quality of its tulips, their rich pigmentation and fine detail throughout the bouquet mark it out as an exceptional example of early Dutch still life painting and of a genre of painting less than two decades old.

Though known also as a painter of landscapes, it is his handful of still lifes that distinguish Van den Berghe above others of his generation. He is recorded as a member of the guild in Middelburg in 1619 (when he is mentioned as ‘beleeder’) and again in 1621, and was still living there in 1628, at which point all records of him cease. Previously it had been thought that a Game piece sold in Middelburg in 1779, reported as being signed and dated 1642, provided proof of his existence beyond the 1620s, but description, size and signature correspond perfectly with the 1624 work in the Getty, Los Angeles; the 1642 date given in 1779 must therefore have been an error in transcription.

1. See L.J. Bol, The Bosschaert Dynasty, Leigh-on-Sea 1960, p. 55, reproduced plate 64
2. Sold London, Sotheby’s, 11 December 1985, lot 43

Sotheby's. Old Master & British Paintings Evening Sale. London | 03 juil. 2013, 07:00 PM - www.sothebys.com

Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder (Antwerp 1573 - 1621 The Hague), Still life of roses, marigolds, aquilegia, violets,...

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Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder (Antwerp 1573 - 1621 The Hague), Still life of roses, marigolds, aquilegia, violets, convolvulus, hollyhocks, peonies, cornflowers, forget-me-nots, jacob's ladders, lily of the valley and carnations in a Wan-Li Kraak porcelain vase with a butterfly and a snail on a ledge. Photo  Sotheby's

oil on oak panel; 43.5 by 32.3 cm.; 17 1/8 by 12 3/4 in. Estimate 400,000-600,000 GBP. Lot sold 482,500 GBP

PROVENANCE: Bears an old label on the reverse: Nr. 774, Stilleben auf Holz, Holländisch, Ende 17. Jahrh., FR. 1275;
With Galerie Knoff, Zurich;
From whom acquired circa 1935 by a private collector;
By whom sold, London, Sotheby's, 10 December 1986, lot 58 (as Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder), for £190,000 to Shickman;
Anonymous sale, New York, Sotheby's, 25 January 2001, lot 117, as Attributed to Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder, unsold;
With Herman Shickman, New York;
From whom acquired in 2004 by Robert Noortman, Maastricht;
From whom acquired in 2005 by the present collector.

EXHIBITED: Münster, Westfälischen Landesmuseum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte Münster,die Maler tom Ring, 1 September-10 November 1996, no. 81.

LITTERATURE: S. Segal, in A. Lorenz (ed.),  die Maler tom Ring, exhibition catalogue, Münster 1996, vol. 1, p. 130, vol. 2, pp. 400-1, no. 81, reproduced (as Netherlandish or German, late 16th Century).

NOTE: The nature of Bosschaert’s early work has long been the subject of speculation.  His earliest dated work is from 1605, and from then on a sequence of dated and undated works allows us to chart the progress of his career with some precision.  By 1605 however he was already well over thirty years old, and he was recorded as a member of the Guild of Saint Luke from 1593 onwards, serving as its Dean on occasion.  He must therefore have been active as a painter for at least twelve years before his earliest dated work, and although it is sometimes assumed that he did not turn his hand to flower painting until 1605 or shortly before, it seems more likely that he had an early career in the genre that predates 1605.  Given the sophistication of his flower paintings from 1606 and onwards, it is most unlikely that they could be the works of an artist embarking on a career in the genre of flower painting.  Perhaps one of the reasons why some have assumed this to be the case is the absence of much in the way of independent flower-still life painting in European art before this date. The earliest surviving  dated flower-pieces in oils in Netherlandish art were painted by Roelandt Savery in 1603, possibly in Amsterdam, but more likely after his arrival in Prague.  Jacques de Gheyn was probably painting flower pieces in oils before 1604, and possibly as early as 1600, but his earliest surviving dated flower piece is from 1612.  The earliest documentary evidence for a flower-piece by Jan Brueghel the Elder is 1605, but given the sophistication of his still lifes of 1606-8, he may well have painted them before that.  What is clear is that from 1606 onwards there was a sudden and considerable output in the genre by Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder, Jan Brueghel the Elder, Roelandt Savery and their increasing numbers of followers.

The causes for this explosion of interest in and production of flower painting from 1606 onwards are various.  For Savery it was certainly the obsessive interest in the natural world of his patron in Prague, the Emperor Rudolf II, and the activities coterie of artists responding to it in media other than oil painting: for example in works on vellum by Jacques De Gheyn, Joris Hoefnagel and others, and in prints.  For Jan Brueghel a key impetus came from his loyal patrons in Italy who had earlier promoted his career in the depiction of landscapes.  In the work of these artists, and in that of Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder in Middelburg, their developments as flower painters can be charted in a row of dated works from 1606 onwards.

It is generally accepted that Bosschaert is likely to have encountered Jan Brueghel and his work in 1606, because his flower pieces from that year onwards show an awareness of Brueghel’s style, and this contact must have been renewed in subsequent years, because as Bosschaert’s highly personal style develops, awareness of what Brueghel was doing is detectable in his work.1  That Bosschaert’s artistic personality was amenable to influence becomes clear from the works painted upon his arrival in Utrecht, which respond immediately to what Savery was doing there following his return from Prague.

 A consideration of what Bosschaert was doing in the years before 1606 is therefore ill-served by examining the work of his peers of around that date and later.  The production of images of floral art per se, and not as an adjunct to history painting, existed before the first decade of the 17th Century, but it was highly sporadic, especially in oil painting.  Although produced in relative isolation in Münster in Westphalia, the flower paintings made by Ludger tom Ring in the early 1560s were – at least on the basis of what is known today - revolutionary, and unprecedented in Western art.  Two works are dated 1562, and none is likely to date from much after 1565.2  The artist was from a family of painters active in Westphalia, and the vast majority of their output consisted of portraits.  He does not appear to have had any immediate followers in the still life genre, and there is scant hard evidence for their particular popularity or for a traceable diaspora among collectors, for example in The Netherlands.  

Tom Ring’s influence is however palpable in a group of five still life paintings of flowers in vases etc on pale stone ledges set against a dark background  which are closely linked in style, subject matter and in the size and type of their panels.  The panels are of Baltic oak, and tree ring analysis (dendrochronology) done on several of them including the present picture yields a typical likely use date from around 1601 onwards.3  Moreover, as Martin Bijl and others have observed, the size and the way they are cut is typical of panel production in Middelburg.4  The group comprises:

A.  A still life of flowers in a tall glass vase (43.2 by 33 cm.), sold at Christie’s in New York, 4 October 2007, lot 10;
B.  An adaptation of the above with fewer large flowers and more smaller ones, and crudely painted objects on the ledge, perhaps later additions (53 x 39 cm.); Basel, Kunstmuseum;
C.   The present work (43.5 by 32.3 cm.);
D.  A still life of lilies and numerous other flowers in an earthenware jug (43.3 by 31 cm.), in a private collection.5
E.  A still life of wildflowers in a Venetian glass vase (58.6 by 35.7 cm.), in a private collecton in the U.S.A.6

Apart from the common compositional elements of the two variants A and B, there are further shared motifs.  The yellow iris which appears in the upper left of the present work, C, occurs in identical form in the upper right of  A & B.  The white narcissus set on a diagonal in the lower right of the present work, C, occurs in a corresponding position in no. A, and it recurs, set in the jug in D.  In all of these works the flowers fill the upper two-thirds of the picture plane, extending into the corners and forming an approximate square.  They are all lit from the left. E. is less well-known than the other works, but is closest in style to D.

200L13033_6XWMX_comp_AAll four paintings in the group were probably painted in Middelburg in between circa 1601 and 1605.  They are particularly close to two early and little-studied works by Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder, which almost certainly both predate 1606.   One of these is a signed but undated early work by him in the Stichting P & N de Boer in Amsterdam (see Fig. 1, left).7  In it is to be seen a Damask Rose similar to those in the present work and others.  Moreover the handling of the trefoil columbine leaves rimmed with yellow highlights and the orange flowers is identical to those in the present work, as is the Cabbage White butterfly (Pieris Rapae).  It has a glossy enamel-like handling which is quite unlike his own work from 1606 and later, but which is recognisable in each of the group 1 to 4, and especially in the present work.  These are characteristics which hark back to Ludger tom Ring.  The composition of the De Boer Stichting flower piece is closer in type to Bosschaert’s earliest dated pictures than to any predecessor, but its style points backwards to the present group.

200L13033_comp_BThe other painting by Bosschaert is less studied than the Stichting De Boer work, and although signed with an authentic monogram, has only recently been generally accepted as from his hand (see Fig. 2, right).  That painting, in the Fairhaven collection at Anglesea Abbey in Cambridgeshire (National Trust) is of remarkably high quality and sophistication, but although very similar to it in style and in the enamel-like handling, is compositionally further removed than the Stichting De Boer work from the dated and datable output of Bosschaert from 1606 onwards.8  It has been linked with the present group of four, but it is on a smaller panel.9  Like the others in the group, the blooms fill the corners of the composition (although forming a rectangle rather than a rough square), and they are set against a black background, while resting in a vessel on a pale stone ledge.  The tapering glass beaker decorated with prunts harks forward to Bosschaert’s more familiar later work: indeed it is identical to the one in the De Boer Stichting work; as does the density of the arrangement of blooms, but in other respects it is more closely related to the present group.  The carnation, and the shadow that it casts from the light entering from the left, are virtually identical to the one in the present work: in both pictures it seems to hover above the ledge, though on different sides of the foreground.  An identical group of Yellow Freesias appears to the lower right of the arrangement of blooms in both pictures.  The centre of each composition is anchored by a large white rose, the lower edge of which is partly obscured by leaves, but in both pictures an identical sprig of a pink flower to the right and a bud of the same to the left occur.  The Damask rose that appears in the upper right of both compositions is the same, albeit minus the Cabbage White butterfly in the Fairhaven picture that recurs lower down in the present work.  The sprig of Carnation just breaking out of its bud in the lower left of the blooms in the present picture occurs further up on the left of the Fairhaven work.  The clump of white flowers to the left of each painting is not absolutely identical in each, but is very similar, though rotated about 45 degrees on its axis in the present work.  In both it serves the same compositional purpose. Like the Stichting De Boer picture, its stone ledge setting is a marked characteristic of Bosschaert's early work.

Re-using particular blooms or sprigs or clumps of flowers in different compositions, sometimes in the same relative position, sometimes not, is a familiar characteristic of Bosschaert’s later career, but as is now abundantly clear, he was working in this way early in his career – or at least earlier than his first dated works.

The links between the present work and the signed Stichting de Boer and Fairhaven paintings make it clear that it is an autograph work by Bosschaert, and the close connections between it and the other paintings in the group show that they too are from his hand.  This view has been expressed in the cited literature by Fred G. Meijer and is confirmed by him in a report dated 16th February 2005 and available on request.  Sam Segal initially considered that the group of four should be located in The Netherlands before Bosschaert’s earliest works.  He mentioned the little-known flower painter Lodewijck Jansz. van de Bosch as a possible author, but also advanced the idea that they may have formed part of the early oeuvre of Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder.  He subsequently confirmed the attribution to Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder in a letter dated 25th December 2004.10

The blooms in the present picture emerge from what looks like a Wan-Li (ie then contemporary) Chinese vase with gilt mounts added in The Netherlands.  In fact, the peacock-like bird facing the viewer is not a motif found in imported Wan-Li ware, and the form of the vase is not typical either.  Bosschaert, followed by his pupil Balthasar van der Ast, included this vase with precise form and decoration of his own devising in a number of works, including some of his earliest flower pieces.  Similar vases occur in the works of other early 17th Century flower painters, such as  Jan Brueghel the Elder.

In the absence of dated works, a chronology of the present painting and the other works under discussion is hard to assess.  On the basis of dendrochronology, all are likely to date from after 1600.  Nos A & B are probably the earliest.  The present work, no. C, may be the next in date, followed by D. (to judge from a black and white photograph), then the Fairhaven signed picture and no. D, followed by the Stichting De Boer painting.

Reconstructing the oeuvre of a painter before his earliest dated or securely documented work should only to be undertaken with caution, and must be based on secure solid evidence, as the unmasking of Van Meegeren's forging of an early career for Vermeer reminds us.  On the basis of technical evidence, this painting and the other paintings in the group to which the present work belongs must have been painted in The Netherlands shortly after 1600, probably in Middelburg.  They recall the works of Ludger Tom Ring, and they were surely also influenced by artists working on vellum, and also, especially in their compositions, by engraved flower pieces by Adriaen Collaert and others.  The close relationship between the works is undoubted.  The relationship between them, and between the present work in particular, and the earliest signed works by Bosschaert, including the use of common motifs such as individual blooms and groups of flowers and leaves as part of a working method familiar to us from Bosschaert's subsequent career, is so close that it is most unlikely that anyone other than Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder could have painted them. 

1.  Fred G. Meijer noted this.
2.  See A. Lorenz (ed.), die Maler tom Ring, exhibition catalogue, Münster 1996, vol. II, pp. 390-399, 639, nos. 76-80, 194, all reproduced; see also S. Kemperdick, in B. Brinkmann (ed.), The Magic of Things, exhibition catalogue, Basel 2008, pp. 34-6, no. 3, reproduced, also fig. 8.
3.  Peter Klein’s brief report dated 8th June 2004 indicates a plausible date of use for the Baltic oak panel from 1601 onwards, while Ian Tyers’ more comprehensive report suggests that the tree from which the panel was made was felled sometime after 1590, from which an earliest plausible use date from 1600 onwards can be extrapolated.  Copies of both reports are available on request.
4.  See S. Kemperdick. op. cit., p. 96, under no. 22, also Fred G. Meijer’s report dated 16th February 2005.
5.  The works are as follows:
A.  See Fred G. Meijer’s report dated 10 August 2007, reprinted as the catalogue entry to lot 106, Christie’s catalogue of Old Master Paintings, New York, 4 October 2007, pp. 156-9, reproduced.  See also A. Lorenz (op. cit,), vol. II, pp. 641-2, no. 196, reproduced.
B. Inv. no. 1499; see S. Kemperdick, op. cit., no. 23, reproduced, as Netherlandish Master around 1600 Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder (?).  Fred Meijer (op. cit.)thinks that this picture is "not up to Bosschaert's standard"
D. Idem, pp. 96-7, no. 22, reproduced, as Netherlandish Master around 1600.
6.  See A. Lorenz (ed.), op. cit., vol. II, p. 640, no. 195, reproduced.
7See N. Bakker et al, Masters of Middelburg, exhibition catalogue, Amsterdam 1984, p. 122, no. 3, reproduced.

8.  National Trust Inventory Number 515452; see Segal under literature,  vol. I, p. 130, reproduced fig. 28, as Umkreis [Circle of] Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder; see also F.G. Meijer in the Christie’s catalogue entry, where the attribution to Bosschaert is confirmed following first-hand inspection.  The painting is registered as by Bosschaert on the National Trust website.  A possibly autograph variant of it is recorded in an old photograph kept at the R.K.D, The Hague (oil on panel, 35 by 25 cm.; see De Helsche en fluweelen Brueghel, exhibition catalogue, De Boer, Amsterdam, 1935, cat. no. 255, as by Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder).
9.  Fred G. Meijer has suggested that it may have been cut down from a Middelburg panel of a sort common to the present group, but its composition, with blooms filling the upper two-thirds of the composition but kept within the current picture plane, suggests otherwise.
10.  A copy of this is available on request.  Stephan Kemperdick, in two catalogue entries in the still life exhibition in Basel and elsewhere based his entries on Segal’s opinion of 1996, but noted that the panels are of Middelburg origin; op. cit., pp. 96 &98, under nos. 22 & 23.

Sotheby's. Old Master & British Paintings Evening Sale. London | 03 juil. 2013, 07:00 PM - www.sothebys.com

Jan Van Kessel, Study of insects, butterflies and a snail with a sprig of forget-menots & Study of butterflies and other insects

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2_-FRENCH-DRAWINGS-CANTOR-ARTS-CENTER-NATOIRE-NEPTUNE-AMPHITRITE

5_-FRENCH-DRAWINGS-CANTOR-ARTS-CENTER-ROGER-PSYCHE-ABANDONED

8b9656ce6737175c75de256a3c5cf0a9

3_-FRENCH-DRAWINGS-CANTOR-ARTS-CENTER-BOUCHER-PUTTI

 

Jan Van Kessel (Antwerp 1626 – 1679), Study of insects, butterflies and a snail with a sprig of forget-menots & Study of butterflies and other insects with a sprig of apple blossom. Photo Sotheby's

a pair, the latter signed and dated: j.v.kessel fecit/anno 1659; both oil on copper, each: 12 by 18 cm.; 4 3/8 by 7 1/8 in. Estimate 250,000-350,000 GBP. Lot sold 302,500 GBP

PROVENANCE: Charlotte Anne Montagu Douglas Scott, Duchess of Buccleuch and Queensberry (1811-1895);
By descent to her daughter Lady Mary Montagu Douglas Scott, later wife of Colonel the Hon. Walter Trefusis MC;
Their daughter Adela Mary Charlotte (1879-1952), later wife of Captain William Lennox Naper;
With Leger Galleries, London, 1953;
With Brian Koetser, London 1964;
Where acquired by the family of the present owners.

EXHIBITED: London, Koetser Gallery, 6 April - 12 June 1964, cat. nos. 18a and 18b.

LITTERATURE: The Connoisseur, London, June 1953, reproduced.

NOTE: Jan van Kessel's intimate cabinet paintings, which manage to combine an intense observation of natural history with a wonderfully attractive design, have always been among the most prized of his works. He started painting them in the first half of the 1650s, with the earliest dated examples painted in 1653. Though some fine examples are on panel, such as those in the Ward Collection in the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, the majority were painted on copper, the smooth surface of which was better suited to his meticulous and detailed finish.1 Most of the surving dated examples, like those here, come from the 1650s, but Van Kessel continued painting these subjects well into the 1660s, although the level of finish of the later examples tends to be less exacting than those from the previous decade. Many are purely studies of insects, but these are sometimes, as here, combined with studies of flowers or branches of fruit, and occasionally shells. As Fred G. Meijer has recently observed, Van Kessel only rarely repeated motifs in these studies, and it seems that for each of them he approached his subjects afresh.2  Many studies in the same panels are clearly observed from different viewpoints - some from above such as the snail here, or from the side such as the cockchafer beetle beside it -  and often out of scale to each other, suggesting that each was the result of individual scrutiny.

241L13033_6YPDD_comp_AAlthough we cannot know for certain of their original function, these tiny coppers most probably originally formed part of a series of plates for a small cabinet, in which a collector would have kept his natural specimens as well as other curiosities in small drawers. Unfortunately over time most of these sets were split up, but surviving examples, such as that sold in these Rooms, 11 March 1964, lot 66 (see fig.1) indicate that the smaller panels formed a border around a larger central panel. Another complete set, for example, painted in 1658, and last recorded with the Hallsborough Gallery in London in 1956, included sixteen panels of similar size to the present pair of 14.3 x 19 cms around a central panel of 38.7 by 53 cm.3

1. See also the set of panels of 1653 sold in these Rooms 3 July, 1997, lots 12-14, for £220,000, £215,000 and £200,000 respectively.
2. F.G. Meijer, The Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. Catalogue of the the collection of paintings. The Collection of Dutch and Flemish Still-life paintings bequeathed by Daisy Linda Ward, Zwolle 2003, pp. 228-231.
3. Meijer, op. cit., p. 229, reproduced fig. 41.1, and in colour in The Connoisseur, vol. CXXXVII (1956), no. 553, pp. 198-99.

Sotheby's. Old Master & British Paintings Evening Sale. London | 03 juil. 2013, 07:00 PM - www.sothebys.com

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