Nicolas de Plattemontagne (Paris 1631-1706)
THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN (LOTS 119, 124, 147-8 AND 163-8)
Nicolas de Plattemontagne (Paris 1631-1706)

A seated lady with a lute, with two subsidiary studies of her hands and drapery

Details
Nicolas de Plattemontagne (Paris 1631-1706)
A seated lady with a lute, with two subsidiary studies of her hands and drapery
with inscription 'Montagne'
red and white chalk on light brown paper, watermark Strasburg lily with WR
11¼ x 16½ in. (28.2 x 42 cm.)
Provenance
F.J.B. Watson, and thence by descent to the present owner.

Brought to you by

Rosie Jarvie
Rosie Jarvie

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Lot Essay

Sir Francis Watson seems to have been the first to suggest that the present drawing and the following lot were by Plattemontage, noting their kinship with works by Jean-Baptiste de Champaigne (1631-1681), of whom Plattemontage was a frequent collaborator. A drawing from the Baderou collection in the Musée des Beaux-Arts, Rouen, shows a woman dressed in a very similar costume and seated in the same kind of chair, with her left arm leaning on a table, but the composition is in reverse and no lute is represented (F. Lanoë, Trois maîtres du dessin, exhib. cat., Port-Royal des Champs, Musée national, 2009, no. 111). The same old inscription 'Montagne' in pen and brown ink can be seen on a few other drawings by the artist (Lanoë, op. cit., nos. 108, 116, 127, 150, 156, 161-4, 171, 182) and Frédérique Lanoë suggests that it was put on the works during the valuation of Plattemontagne's studio in 1707 following his death on the Christmas's Eve of 1606 (op. cit., p. 20).

We are grateful to Madame Lanoë for having confirmed the attribution of the drawing from a photograph.

For a note on the collector, please see lot 163.

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