Francois Bonvin (French, 1817-1887)
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF THE LATE DEANE F. JOHNSON, SOLD TO BENEFIT THE JOHNSON CHARITABLE REMAINDER UNITRUST AND THE DEANE F. JOHNSON ALZHEIMER'S RESEARCH FOUNDATION
Francois Bonvin (French, 1817-1887)

Nature morte avec un plan et un globe

Details
Francois Bonvin (French, 1817-1887)
Nature morte avec un plan et un globe
signed and dated 'F. Bonvin. 1880' (upper left)
oil on panel
7¼ x 9in. (18.4 x 22.9cm.)
Painted in 1880
Exhibited
New York, Wheelock Whitney and Company, François Bonvin: An Exhibition of Paintings, April-May 1984, no. 22.
Sale room notice
This work has been authenticated by Gabriel Weisberg.

Please note that this lot was formally in the Collection of the Late Anne McDonnell Ford and Henry Ford II.

Lot Essay

François Bonvin was born in Vaugirard, Paris, in 1817. Although largely self-taught, he received some training as a printer and later at the Gobelins and the Academie Suisse. He also had some contact with François Marius Granet, who Bonvin considered his master. His earliest paintings were still lifes, a subject for which he would be recognized by contemporary critics and collectors as a leader in reviving and developing this genre in the 19th century. Bonvin received official support throughout the Second Empire for the continued production of genre scenes, still lifes, portraits and even landscapes. In addition, commissions and purchases of his work established the artist as an important figure in the realist movement. In 1859, he held a studio exhibition of the works of young artists who has been rejected by the Salon, including Alphonse Legros, Henri Fantin-Latour, James McNeill Whistler and Theodule Ribot.

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