HERBERT JAMES DRAPER (LONDON 1864-1920)
HERBERT JAMES DRAPER (LONDON 1864-1920)
HERBERT JAMES DRAPER (LONDON 1864-1920)
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HERBERT JAMES DRAPER (LONDON 1864-1920)

Studies of a man's draped waist, and head (recto); A nude study of a woman (verso)

Details
HERBERT JAMES DRAPER (LONDON 1864-1920)
Studies of a man's draped waist, and head (recto); A nude study of a woman (verso)
with studio stamp (lower right), numbered '47' (lower left) and with artists notes
black, brown, and white chalk (recto); black chalk with stumping (verso), on brown wove paper, watermark ‘CANSON & MONTGOLFIER VIDALON-LES-A[...]’
24 1⁄4 x 19 1⁄2 in. (61.5 x 49.5 cm)
Provenance
Estate of the artist (his mark ‘H.J.D’, not in Lugt); by descent in the family.
with Julian Hartnoll, London, 1999.
Literature
S. Toll, Herbert Draper. A Life Study, Woodbridge, 2003, p. 94, no. HJD87.xiii.

Brought to you by

Elizabeth Seigel
Elizabeth Seigel Vice President, Specialist, Head of Private and Iconic Collections

Lot Essay

The Lament of Icarus is one of Draper's best-known works, depicting the eponymous reckless son dragged onto a rock by three mourning nymphs, exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1898 and now at Tate Gallery, London (inv. NO1679). Draper used a number of professional models and made many detailed drawings of each individual figure in preparation. The singing nymph with her arms outstretched in despair on the verso of the present sheet was drawn from Ethel Gurden, while the model for the dying figure of Icarus (recto) was Luigi di Lucca, an Italian model whose distinctive strong bone structure appeared in many of Draper's works of the 1890s.

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