THE PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTOR
JEAN BERAUD (French, 1849-1936)

Details
JEAN BERAUD (French, 1849-1936)

La Rue de la Paix

signed Jean Bèraud. lower left--oil on canvas
25¾ x 36 3/8in. (65.4 x 92.4cm.)
Provenance
Bernheim-Jeune & Cie., Paris (purchased directly from the artist on July 26, 1907, no. 16178 until February 19, 1918)
Private Collector, Germany (circa 1920)
Thence by descent

Lot Essay

This lively Paris street scene, set in the early hours of evening, shows the end of a busy work day at the famous Paris fashion house, the Maison Paquin located at 51 Rue de la Paix. Several pretty young seamstresses are shown leaving the building or meeting their boyfriends while one may also catch a glipse of some elegant Parisiennes, perhaps clad in the latest designs of Madame Paquin. In its day, the Maison Paquin rivaled the great House of Worth. Madame Paquin's clients ranged from the Queens of Belgium, Portugal and Spain to the mistresses of the Prince of Wales and the famous courtesans Liane de Pougy and La Belle Otéro. At the peak of her sucess, Madame Paquin employed over two thousand workers, while most other fashion houses included only fifty to four hundred employees.

The Maison Paquin would have appealed to Jean Beraud as a subject for a major painting as no other artist chronicled Parisian life at the end of the 19th century as did Beraud, and the Maison Paquin, with its famous reputation for the best in fashion, represented the Paris that Jean Beraud depicted with the accuracy of a camera lens.

This painting will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné of Jean B©raud's works being prepared by the Wildenstein Foundation.