Claude Vignon (Tours 1593-1670 Paris)
Claude Vignon (Tours 1593-1670 Paris)

The Penitent Saint Peter

Details
Claude Vignon (Tours 1593-1670 Paris)
The Penitent Saint Peter
red chalk, squared in red chalk, partly incised, the verso blackened for transfer
7 3/8 x 10¾ in. (18.5 x 17.3 cm.)
Literature
P. Pacht-Bassani, Claude Vignon 1593-1670, Paris, 1992, no. 104.
French prints from the Age of the Musketeers, exhib. cat., Boston, Museum of Fine Arts, 1998, p. 176, under no. 92, nt. 2.
Exhibited
Cleveland, Museum of Art and elsewhere, From Fontainebleau to the Louvre: French drawings from the 17th century, 1989, no. 65.
Engraved
etched in reverse by the artist (Pacht Bassani, op. cit., p. 244, no. 107).

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

Steinberg acquired this drawing in the mid-1960s in the Portobello Road, London where it was in a mount carrying an attribution to Guercino. Steinberg later found an etching with the exact dimensions and nearly exact composition in reverse (there are some variations in the folds of drapery) in the British Museum printroom. The incised contours, squaring in red chalk, and verso blackened for transfer support Steinberg's initial conclusion that this drawing was preparatory for the print. The Penitent Saint Peter is one of the few compositions both drawn and etched by Vignon.
One impression includes an inscription 'C. Vignon Invent. Pinxit et sculpsit F. L'anglois alias Ciartres excud./Cum. Privil. Regis Christianis.' By including the mention of the Royal Priviledge, Vignon was emphasizing the importance of this composition. While the artist did paint and engrave this subject several times (Pacht Bassani, op. cit., pp. 240-41, no. 100; pp. 496-97, no. 536; p. 548, nos. MC 99, MC 102), no painting by Vignon based on this composition is documented.

More from Old Master & Early British Drawings & Watercolors

View All
View All