A LOUIS XV AUBUSSON PASTORAL TAPESTRY
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… Read more THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN 
A LOUIS XV AUBUSSON PASTORAL TAPESTRY

THIRD QUARTER 18TH CENTURY, POSSIBLY AFTER JACQUES-NICOLAS JUILLARD

Details
A LOUIS XV AUBUSSON PASTORAL TAPESTRY
Third quarter 18th Century, possibly after Jacques-Nicolas Juillard
Woven in wools and silks, depicting the right segment of La Halte des Chasseurs, and a gentleman hunter talking to a girl in a wooden landscape, with a dog drinking from a stream, areas of re-weaving
105in. x 58½in. (266cm. x 148.5cm.)
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis. This lot, if not cleared by 1pm on the next business day following the sale will be removed to the warehouse of: Cadogan Tate Ltd., Fine Art Services Cadogan House, 2 Relay Road, London W12 7SJ. Tel: 44(0)20 8735 3700. Fax: 44(0)20 8735 3701. Lots will be available for collection following transfer to Cadogan Tate, every week-day from 9am to 5pm. An initial transfer and administration charge of £3.20 (Paintings) or £18.50 (Furniture/Objects) and a storage charge of £1.60 (Paintings) or £ 3.20 (Furniture/Objects) per lot per day will be payable to Cadogan Tate. These charges are subject to VAT and an insurance surcharge. Exceptionally large pictures will be subject to a surcharge.

Lot Essay

This panel depicts, with some small alterations, the right segment of La Halte des Chasseurs, an example of which is in the Musee du Petit Palais in Paris (D. and P. Chevalier and P.F. Bertrand, Les Tapisseries d'Aubusson et de Felletin, lausanne, 1988, p. 146). The Chevaliers and Bertrand compare this subject to the only tapestry that can be linked to a documented work by Jacques-Nicolas Juillard (d. 1790), the Metairie au Bord de la Riviere, and believe it to be by the same author.

Juillard studied under Francois Boucher and concentrated on the art of landscape painting. After travelling to Italy in 1749, he was comissioned to design a tapestry series for the marchand-mercier Mathieu Dessarteaux, which determined Juillard's subsequent career. He succeeded Jean-joseph Dumons in 1755 as peintre des manufactures d'Aubusson et de Felletin. His contract specified tht he was to supply the workshops with a set of six designs for tapestries annually and to reside at Aubusson for four months every other year. Astonishingly, however, none of his designs for Gobelins, Beauvais or Aubusson have as yet been categorically identified although it is known that he supplied at least thirteen series between 1755 and 1782 and contiued to design tapestries until 1789.

More from ENGLISH AND CONTINENTAL FURNITURE, TAPESTRIES AND WORKS OF A

View All
View All