A TINTED-PLASTER BUST OF MADAME DE WAILLY
A TINTED-PLASTER BUST OF MADAME DE WAILLY

AFTER PAJOU, FRENCH, 19TH CENTURY

Details
A TINTED-PLASTER BUST OF MADAME DE WAILLY
AFTER PAJOU, FRENCH, 19TH CENTURY
Depicted dexter and half draped in a robe, on a later pink granite socle and a later floral-cast ormlou-mounted rouge griotte marble fluted columnar pedestal base and modern wood plinth, insribed 'Pajou.f.178(4?)' and the remains of a paper label typed '...Wailly by Pajou' and marked in black chalk '5694'
23 in. (58.5 cm.) high; 74 in. (188 cm.) high overall

Lot Essay

Adélaide-Flore Belleville was the wife of the architecte du Roi Charles de Wailly (1730-1798), one of Pajou's closest friends. They had known each other since their tours to Rome. De Wailly built two neighboring houses on land he owned, one for each family, on the Rue de Penthièvre in Paris.

This bust is the pair to the bust of Charles de Wailly executed by the Pajou atelier in 1789. The original marble bust of Madame de Wailly, also dated 1789, is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. For a discussion of the plaster and terracotta versions, see Augustin Pajou, Royal Sculptor: 1730-1809, New York and Paris, 20 October 1997 - 19 January 1998 and 26 February - 24 May 1998, pp. 267-268, fig. 714.

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