JEAN-BAPTISTE OUDRY (PARIS 1686-1755 BEAUVAIS)
JEAN-BAPTISTE OUDRY (PARIS 1686-1755 BEAUVAIS)
JEAN-BAPTISTE OUDRY (PARIS 1686-1755 BEAUVAIS)
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JEAN-BAPTISTE OUDRY (PARIS 1686-1755 BEAUVAIS)
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This lot is offered without reserve.
JEAN-BAPTISTE OUDRY (PARIS 1686-1755 BEAUVAIS)

Album containing a frontispiece and 138 illustrations for books I to VI of the Fables of Jean de La Fontaine

Details
JEAN-BAPTISTE OUDRY (PARIS 1686-1755 BEAUVAIS)
Album containing a frontispiece and 138 illustrations for books I to VI of the Fables of Jean de La Fontaine
each drawing (except nos. 16, 23, 65 and 103) signed ‘JB. Oudry’ and dated ‘1729’, ‘1730’, or ‘1731’, the frontispiece dated ‘1752’; with a handwritten title page ‘FABLES/ DE/ LA FONTAINE/ DESSINEES/ PAR J.B. OUDRY/ PEINTRE ORD.RE DU ROY/ ET/ DE SON ACADEMIE DE PEINTURE ET SCULPTURE// OUVRAGE/ Commencé en 1729/ Et fini en 1734./ CONTENANT 245 FABLES.’; each drawing pasted onto the pages of the album, and above numbered from 1 to 139, but skipping 48; opposite each drawing the fable’s number (in Roman numerals) and title; on the last three pages an alphabetical index of the fables’ titles; pasted into the beginning of the book a handwritten note by De Bure frères dated 1828 describing the contents of the album and of the second volume
brush and black (in a few cases brown) ink, gray wash, heightened with white, on blue paper, pen and black ink framing lines, blue wash; bound in contemporary blue leather gilt with lettering on the spine ‘DESSEINS DES/ FABLES DE LA FONTAINE PAR/ I.B. OUDRY’ and ‘PREMIERE PARTIE’
each drawing circa 9 7/16 x 7 1/2 in. (24 x 19 cm.), each page circa 12 1/8 x 10 in. (30.8 x 25.5 cm.)
Provenance
Jean-Louis Regnard de Montenault, Paris, circa 1751.
with De Bure frères, Paris;
Jean-Jacques de Bure (1765-1853), Paris, 1828; Paris, 1-18 December 1853, part of lot 344 (both volumes), sold for 1,800 francs to
Comte Antoine-Claire Thibaudeau (1765-1854), Paris; both volumes possibly given by him to
Eugénie Doche (1821-1900), Paris; both volumes sold by her for 2,500 francs to
Librairie Fontaine, Paris; both volumes sold for 5,000 francs in 1856 to
Aaron Euryale dit Félix Solar (1815-1871), Paris; Paris, 19 November-18 December 1860, part of lot 627 (both volumes), sold for 6,100 francs in 1860 to Cléder for
Baron Isidore-Justin-Séverin Taylor (1789-1879), Paris.
Emile Péreire (1800-1875), Paris (both volumes).
with Librairie Morgand et Fatout, Paris, bought circa 1876 (Bulletin de la librairie Morgand et Fatout, I, no. 6, January 1877, p. 482); both volumes sold to
Louis Roederer (1845-1880), Reims; by inheritance to his nephew,
Louis-Victor Olry-Roederer (1860-1903), Reims.
Agnew’s, London; both volumes sold in 1923, with the rest of Olry-Roederer’s library, to
Albert Simon Wolf Rosenbach (1875-1903), New York;
Rosenbach Company, Philadelphia; both volumes sold circa 1946 to
Raphaël Esmérian (1903-1976), Paris (his ex-libris); Palais Galliera, Paris, 6 June 1973, part of lot 46 (both volumes), sold for 2,000,000 francs to
Claus Virch (1927-2012), Bermuda Islands (Art Associates Partnership), who dismembers the second album.
British Rail Pension Fund, London (the first volume); Sotheby’s, London, 3 July 1996, lot 96.
Literature
L. Gougenot, ‘Vie de Monsieur Oudry, peintre et professeur de l’Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture’, Mémoires inédits sur la vie et les ouvrages des membres de l’Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture, publiés d’après les manuscrits conservés à l’École impériale des Beaux-Arts, II, Paris 1854, pp. 379-380.
J.-C. Brunet, Manuel du libraire et de l’amateur de livres, Paris, III, 1862, col. 753.
H. Cohen, Guide de l’amateur de livres à figures et à vignettes du XVIIIe siècle, C. Mehl, ed., third edition, Paris, 1876, col. 228.
R. de Portalis, Les Dessinateurs d’illustrations au dix-huitième siècle, II, Paris, 1877, pp. 483-489.
H. Cohen, Guide de l’amateur de livres à vignettes (et à figures) du XVIIIème siècle, Paris, 1880, pp. 336-337.
H. Cohen, Guide de l’amateur de livres à gravures du XVIIIe siècle, fifth edition, Paris, 1886, cols. 301-302.
A. Després, Les Éditions illustrées des Fables de La Fontaine, Paris, 1892, p. 29.
H. Cohen, Guide de l’amateur de livres à gravures du XVIIIème siècle, sixth edition, Paris, 1912, col. 548.
J. Locquin, Archives de l’art français, new series, VI, 1912, Catalogue raisonné de l’œuvre de Jean-Baptise Oudry, peintre du Roi (1686-1755), p. 152, nos. 933-1072.
Marquis de Girardin, ‘L’Édition des Fables dite d’Oudry de La Fontaine’, Bulletin du bibliophile et du bibliothécaire, 1913, pp. 219, 220.
S. de Ricci, The Roederer Library of French Books, Prints and Drawings of the Eighteenth Century, Philadelphia and New York, 1923, [p. 7].
R. Gaucheron, ‘La Préparation et le lancement d’un livre de luxe au XVIIIème siècle. L’Édition des Fables de La Fontaine dite d’Oudry’, Arts et métiers graphiques, no. 2, 1927, pp. 77, 80.
E. Rodocanachi, ‘Les Petites-filles de La Fontaine et la propriété littéraire’, Séances et travaux de l’Académie des sciences morales et politiques. Compte rendu, XC, 1930, pp. 95, 98.
J. Vergnet-Ruiz, ‘Oudry, 1686 à 1755’, in L. Dimier, ed., Les Peintres français du XVIIIe siècle, II, Paris, 1930, pp. 146, 147, 182, part of nos. 169-445.
H. Voss, in H. Thieme, U. Becker et al., eds., Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zum Gegenwart, XXVI, Leipzig, 1932, p. 98.
R. Genaille, ‘Les Fables de La Fontaines en tapisseries de Beauvais du XVIIIème siècle. Contribution à l’étude de J.B. Oudry’, Mémoires de la Société académique d’archéologie, sciences et arts du département de l’Oise, XXVII, 1933, p. 439.
M. Roux, Inventaire du fonds français. Graveurs du dix-huitième siècle, I, Paris, 1930, pp. 57, 332-333; III, Paris, 1934, p. 503; IV, Paris, 1946, pp. 74-76.
P. Mornand, ‘Iconographie des Fables de la Fontaine’, Le Portique, no. 3, 1946, p. 85.J. Furstenberg, La Gravure originale dans l’illustrations du livre français aux dix-huitième siècle/ Die Original-Graphik in der französischen Buch-Illustration des achtzehnten Jahrhunderts, Hamburg, 1975, pp. 17, 18, 79.
H.N. Opperman, Jean-Baptiste Oudry, Ph.D. diss., University of Chicago, 1972 (published New York and London, 1977), I, p. 99-101, 128, 143; II, pp. 682-685, nos. D221-D359.
H.N. Opperman, J.-B. Oudry, 1686-1755, exhib. cat., Paris, Galeries Nationales du Grand Palais, 1982-1983, pp. 24, 37, 39, 157-159.
J.-B. Oudry, 1686-1755, exhib. cat., Fort Worth, Kimbell Art Museum, and Kansas City, The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 1983, pp. 146-147, under no. 39 (catalogue by H.N. Opperman).
Die französischen Zeichnungen, 1570-1930, exhib. cat., Karlsruhe, Staatliche Kunsthalle Karlsruhe, 1983, p. 39, under no. 13 (entry by J. Eckart von Borries).
U. Bodemann in Fabula docet. Illustrierte FabelBücher aus sechs Jahrhunderten, exhib. cat., Wolfenbüttel, Herzog August Bibliothek, and other venues, 1983-1985, p. 130, under no. 51.
Drawings from the Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Victor Thaw. Part II, exhib. cat., New York, The Pierpont Morgan Library, and Richmond, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, 1985, p. 32, under no. 10 (entry by S. Wiles).
Dessins français du XVIIIe siècle de Watteau à Lemoyne, exhib. cat., Paris, Musée du Louvre, 1987, p. 91, under no. 119 (entry by L. Duclaux).
Jean-Baptiste Oudry. Jean-Antoine Houdon. Vermächtnis der Aufklärung. Sammlung Fables. Mise en vers Jean de La Fontaine, estampes Jean-Baptiste Oudry, peintre du Roi, Paris, 1992, p. 8 (introduction by D. de Selliers).
C.D. Denison, French Master Drawings from The Pierpont Morgan Library, exhib. cat., Paris, Musée du Louvre, and New York, The Pierpont Morgan Library, 1993-1994, p. 96, under no. 41.
Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Jean de la Fontaine, 1995-1996, p. 154 (essay by C. Lesage).
H.N. Opperman, in J. Turner, ed., The Dictionary of Art, London, 1996, XXIII, p. 667.
S.F. McCulagh, ‘Illustrations for La Fontaine’s Fable 80, “Nothing in Excess” (“Rien de trop”), 1732’, Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies, XXVI, 2000, no. 1, Maineri to Miró: The Regenstein Collection since 1975, pp. 42.
Staatliches Museum Schwerin, exhib. cat., Schwerin, Staatliches Museum Schwerin, 2000, pp. 10-11 (essay by C. Schönfeld).
European Drawings from the Collection of the Ackland Art Museum, exhibition. cat., Chapel Hill, Ackland Art Museum, 2001 p. 116, under no. 44 (entry by A.L. Schroder).
P. Fontimpe, Jean de La Fontaine de A à Z. Dictionnaire historique, artistique et littéraire, Reims, 2001, p. 192.
R.J.A. te Rijdt, De Watteau à Ingres. Dessins français du XVIIIe siècle du Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, exhib. cat., Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, and Paris, Institut Néerlandais, 2002-2003, p. 67, under nos. 20-21, ill.
S. Couturier, French drawings from the National Gallery of Canada, exhib. cat., Ottawa, National Gallery of Canada, Victoria, Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, and Edmonton, Edmonton Art Gallery, 2004-2005, p. 98, under no. 38.
Oudry’s Painted Menagerie. Portraits of Exotic Animals in Eighteenth-Century Europe, exhib. cat., Los Angeles, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Houston, Museum of Fine Arts, and Schwerin, Staatliches Museum Schwerin, 2007-2008, pp. 2 (essay by C. Bailey), 76, 85, 88 (essay by C. Giviskos), 121 (essay by M. Morton).
M.M. Grasselli, Renaissance to Revolution. French Drawings from the National Gallery of Art, 1500-1800, exhib. cat., Washington, National Gallery of Art, 2009-2010, p. 114, under no. 48.
Reuniting the Masters: European Drawings from West Coast Collections, exhib. cat., Sacramento, Crocker Art Museum, 2016-2017, p. 97, under no. 20 (entry by C.D. Denison).
A.L. Clark, Jr., in Tradition and Transitions. Eighteenth-Century French Art from the Horvitz Collection, exhib. cat., Paris, Petit Palais, Musée des Beaux-Arts de la Ville de Paris, 2017, p. 72, under no. 13.
X. Ressos, in A. Beyer, B. Savoy and W. Tegethoff, eds., Allgemeines Künstler-Lexikon. Die bildenden Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, XCIV, Berlin and Boston, 2017, p. 41.
A.L. Clark, Jr., French Drawings from the Age of Claude, Poussin, Watteau, and Fragonard. Highlights from the Collection of the Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2022 p. 154, under no. 52.
Exhibited
New York, Pierpont Morgan Library, Fables from Aesop to Thurber, 1965 (without catalogue).
Special notice
This lot is offered without reserve.
Further details
List of the 139 drawings contained in the album

Frontispiece (A bust crowned by Aesop and animals), 1752

Book I
1. La Cigale et la fourmi, 1729
2. Le Corbeau et le renard, 1729
3. La Grenouille qui se veut faire aussi grosse que le bœuf, 1729
4-5. Les Deux mulets (two drawings), 1729
6. Le Loup et le chien, 1729
7. Le Génisse, la chèvre et la brebis, en société avec le Lion, 1729
8. La Besace, 1729
9. L’Hirondelle et les petits oiseaux, 1729
10. Le Rat de ville et le rat des champs, 1729
11. Le Loup et l’agneau, 1729
12. L’Homme et son image, 1729
13-14. Le Dragon à plusieurs têtes et le dragon à plusieurs queues (two drawings), 1730 et 1729
15. Les Voleurs et l’âne, 1729
16. Simonide préservé par les Dieux
17. La Mort et le malheureux, 1729
18. La Mort et le bûcheron, 1729
19. L’Homme entre deux âges et ses deux maîtresses, 1729
20-21. Le Renard et la cigogne (two drawings), 1729
22. L’Enfant et la maître d’école, 1729
23. Le Coq et la perle
24. Les Frelons et les mouches à miel, 1729
25. Le Chêne et le roseau, 1729

Book II
26. Contre ceux qui ont un goût difficile, 1729
27. Conseil tenu par les rats, 1729
28. Le Loup plaidant contre le renard par devant le singe, 1729
29. Les Deux taureaux et une grenouille, 1729
30. La Chauve-souris et les deux belettes, 1729
31. L’Oiseau blessé d’une flèche, 1729
32. La Lice et sa compagne, 1729
33. L’Aigle et l’escarbot, 1729
34. Le Lion et le moucheron, 1729
35. L’Âne chargé d’éponges, et l’âne chargé de sel, 1729
36. Le Lion et le rat, 1729
37. La Colombe et la fourmi, 1729
38. L’Astrologue qui se laisse tomber dans un puits, 1729
39. Le Lièvre et les grenouilles, 1729
40. Le Coq et le renard, 1729
41. Le Corbeau voulant imiter l’aigle, 1729
42. Le Paon se plaignant à Junon, 1729
43. La Chatte métamorphosée en femme, 1729
44. Le Lion et l’âne chassant, 1729
45. Testament expliqué par Ésope, 1729

Book III
46-47, 49-51. Le Meunier, son fils et l’âne (five drawings), 1729
52. Les Membres et l’estomac, 1729
53. Le Loup devenu berger, 1729
54. Les Grenouilles que demandent un roi, 1729
55. Le Renard et le bouc, 1729
56. L’Aigle, la laie et la chatte, 1729
57. L’Ivrogne et sa femme, 1729
58-59. La Goutte et l’araignée (two drawings), 1729
60. Le Loup et la cigogne, 1729
61. Le Lion abattu par l’homme, 1729
62. Le Renard et les raisins, 1729
63. Le Cygne et le cuisiner, 1729
64-65. Les Loups et les brebis (two drawings), 1729
66. Le Lion devenu vieux, 1730
67. Philomèle et Progné, 1730
68. La Femme noyée, 1730
69. La Belette entrée dans un grenier, 1730
70-71. Le Chat et un vieux rat (two drawings), 1730

Book IV
72-73. Le Lion amoureux (two drawings), 1730
74. Le Berger et la mer, 1730
75. La Mouche et la fourmi, 1730
76-77. Le Jardinier et son seigneur (two drawings), 1730
78. L’Âne et le petit chien, 1730
79. Le Combat des rats et des belettes, 1730
80. Le Singe et le dauphin, 1730
81. L’Homme et l’idole de bois, 1730
82. Le Geai paré des plumes du paon, 1730
83. Le Chameau et les bâtons flottants, 1730
84. La Grenouille et le rat, 1730
85. Tribut envoyé par les animaux à Alexandre, 1730
86. Le Cheval s’étant voulu venger du cerf, 1730
87. Le Renard et le buste, 1730
88. Le Loup, la chèvre et le chevreau, 1730
89. Le Loup, la mère, et l’enfant, 1730
90. Parole de Socrate, 1730
91-92. Le Vieillard et ses enfants (two drawings), 1730
93. L’Oracle et l’impie, 1730
94. L’Avare qui a perdu son trésor, 1730
95. L’Œil du maître, 1730
96. L’Alouette et ses petits avec la maître d’un champ, 1730

Book V
97. Le Bûcheron et le Mercure, 1730
98. Le Pot de terre et le pot de fer, 1730
99. Le Petit poisson et le pêcheur, 1730
100. Les Oreilles du lièvre, 1730
101. Le Renard qui a la queue coupée, 1730
102. La Vieille et les deux servantes, 1730
103. Le Satyre et le passant
104. Le Cheval et le loup, 1730
105. Le Laboureur et ses enfants, 1730
106. La Montagne qui accouche, 1730
107. La Fortune et le jeune enfant, 1730
108. Les Médecins, 1730
109. La Poule aux œufs d’or, 1730
110. L’Âne portant des reliques, 1730
111. Le Cerf et la vigne, 1730
112. Le Serpent et la lime, 1720 (for 1730)
113. Le Lièvre et la perdrix, 1730
114. L’Aigle et le hibou, 1731
115. Le Lion s’en allant en guerre, 1731
116. L’Ours et les deux compagnons, 1731
117. L’Âne vêtu de la peau du lion, 1731

Book VI
118. Le Pastre et le lion, 1731
119. Le Lion et le chasseur, 1731
120. Phébus et Borée, 1731
121. Jupiter et Métayer, 1731
122. Le Cochet, le chat et le souriceau, 1731
123. Le Renard, le singe et les animaux, 1731
124. Le Mulet se vantant de sa généalogie, 1731
125. Le Vieillard et l’âne, 1731
126. Le Cerf se voyant dans l’eau, 1731
127. Le Lièvre et la tortue, 1731
128-129. L’Âne et ses maîtres (two drawings), 1731
130. Le Soleil et les grenouilles, 1731
131. Le Villageois et le serpent, 1731
132. Le Lion malade et le renard, 1731
133. L’Oiseleur, l’autour et l’alouette, 1731
134. Le Cheval et l’âne, 1731
135. Le Chien qui lâche sa proie pour l’ombre, 1731
136. le Chartier embourbé, 1731
137. Le Charlatan, 1731
138. La Discorde, 1731
139. La Jeune veuve, 1731
Sale room notice
Please note that the album was last sold on 2 July 1996, not 1986 as stated in the catalogue.

Brought to you by

Jonquil O’Reilly
Jonquil O’Reilly Vice President, Specialist, Head of Sale

Lot Essay

It is hard to think of a more fortunate encounter between a painter and a literary work than that between the greatest of French animaliers, Jean-Baptiste Oudry, and the fables of Jean de La Fontaine (1621-1695). Among the most widely admired poems in French literature, they still delight every child who gets to learn them at school, and rare are those with a French education who cannot recite, long after having left school, at least some verses of La Cigale et la fourmi (‘The Cicada and the Ant’) or Le Corbeau et le renard (‘The Crow and the Fox’). Throughout his career, Oudry produced paintings which took inspiration from one or another of the fables, such as The Fox and the Grapes from 1725, formerly in the Staatliches Museum Schwerin, the Lion and the Fly from 1732 at the Nationalmuseum, Stockholm (inv. NM 862), a pair of paintings made in 1747 for the decoration of the Dauphin’s appartement in Versailles from 1747 (inv. MV 6212, MV 6213), and numerous other canvases (Opperman, op. cit., 1977, I, nos. P51-PP85, II, figs. 121, 177, 178, 200, 223, 424; and Opperman, op. cit., 1982-1983, nos. 86, ill.). It was, however, in an extended series of 275 drawings that he measured himself fully with La Fontaine’s fables, proving himself in the process to be as gifted a storyteller, a poet and a wit as was his literary predecessor. The album offered here (Figs. 1 and 2), which includes the first half of Oudry’s illustrations for the fables and which is the only one to be preserved intact, is at the same time a monument to the artist’s mastery and playfulness, and homage to an undisputed masterpiece of French poetry.

As recounted by Oudry’s first biographer, the Abbé Louis Gougenot, in a manuscript from 1761, written shortly after the artist’s death (but published only in 1854), the drawings were ‘only the fruit of the evenings of two winters’ (op. cit., p. 380: ‘cet ouvrage […] n’est le fruit que des soirées de deux hivers’). In fact, as the dates on the drawings indicate, they were made over a period of five years, between 1729 and 1734, but it is indeed possible that Oudry worked on them at night, while during the day he created his paintings, as well as the designs for tapestries which preoccupied him for much of the 1730s (Opperman, op. cit., 1982-1983, pp. 126-156). The dates also show that he worked through the 243 fables, divided into five books, in the order intended by La Fontaine. The idiosyncratic technique of the drawings – brush and gray or sometimes brown ink, skilfully heightened with white bodycolor on blue paper – lends the scenes an almost nocturnal feeling, even if most are actually set during the day. A trompe-l’œil frame, consisting of black pen lines and blue wash on the drawings’ primary support, heightens this impression, and makes the drawings unique and immediately recognizable among Oudry’s substantial output as a draftsman, and among French drawings of the period in general.

It seems Oudry did not intend his drawings for any other purpose than his own enjoyment; the preface of the edition discussed below specifies that he ‘made them for his own pleasure, and in those moments of joy and fancy when an artist vividly captures the ideas inspired by his subject, and when he gives free rein to his genius’ (Fables choisies, mises en vers, I, Paris, 1755, p. iv: ‘les composoit pour son propre plaisir, & dans ces momens de joie & de fantaisie où un Artiste saisit vivement les idées de son sujet, & donne un libre essor à son génie’). But the idea to make them into prints to illustrate La Fontaine’s text must been an obvious one. Probably around 1750, some twenty years after Oudry started working on his drawings, the printmaker Gabriel Huquier brought out a first set of twelve prints under the title Livre d’animaux (Fig. 3; see Opperman, op. cit., 1982-1983, p. 158). Shortly afterwards, the Paris publisher Jean-Louis Regnard de Montenault acquired the series, completed in 1752 with a frontispiece which opens the first volume. However, the painterly quality of Oudry’s style made the drawings less suited to serve as direct models for the engravers, and Montenault commissioned Charles-Nicolas Cochin the Younger (1715-1790) to copy the compositions in a more linear style in graphite (for two examples in the collection of Jean Bonna, see N. Strasser, Dessins français du XVIe au XVIIIe siècle, Geneva, 2016, no. 64, ill.; and for one at the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa (inv. 41139), see Couturier, op. cit., no. 39, ill.). Cochin, in association with more than forty other printmakers, produced the elegant engravings to which the edition brought out by Montenault still owes its reputation as one of the most magnificently illustrated books of the eighteenth century (Fig. 4). The first three volumes appeared speedily in 1755 and 1756, but the costs of the undertaking were so high that the fourth and final volume, of which the title page is dated 1759, was published probably only in 1760, thanks to a substantial grant from King Louis XV himself (Opperman, op. cit., 1977, II, p. 684).

The engravings generally reproduce the drawings’ compositions faithfully, although in some of them changes were introduced: a small number do not reverse the original composition, meaning Cochin must have reversed them in his drawing after them (nos. 5, 9, 19, 37, 63); and sometimes details were altered, as in drawing 88, or in the frontispiece (no. 1), where the bust admired by the hunchbacked Aesop and a grouping of animals appears in the drawing to represent Louis XV, whereas in the engraving he is recognizable as La Fontaine. What the prints fail to capture, however, is the spirited execution of Oudry’s originals: the agility of the brushwork, the effective use of darker accents, and the subtlety and playfulness of the white heightening.

It is ironic that the compositions, which played an important role in establishing Oudry’s reputation (Opperman, op. cit., 1977, II, pp. 157-158), were better known to his modern admirers from the prints than from the original drawings before the sale of the two albums in 1973, and even afterwards most drawings were not reproduced. The scholar and dealer Claus Virch, who bought both albums, dismembered the second one, containing drawings made between 1732 and 1734, and individual sheets from it found their way to numerous museums in Europe and in particular in North America (see, for instance, Te Rijdt, op. cit., nos. 20-21, ill.; and Grasselli, op. cit., no. 48, ill.), and to private collections such as Jeffrey Horvitz’s (Clark, op. cit., 2017, no. 13, ill., p. 621, nos. A.822, A.823, ill.; Clark, op. cit., 2022, no. 52, ill.); and they regularly appear on the market (recent examples sold Sotheby’s, New York, 31 January 2018, lot 6; Christie’s, New York, 30 October 2018, lot 256; and Sotheby’s, London, 29 July 2020, lots 225 and 226). Virch left intact the first album, with the drawings made between 1729 and 1731, sold it on to the British Rail Pension Fund, which in its turn offered the album for sale in 1996. Few have had an occasion to see it, and it had not been photographed in its entirety before the preparations of the present sale. A reproduction of all drawings in the first album is available on www.christies.com.

Those who take the time to leaf through the album – in person or virtually – are greatly rewarded. Oudry is a faithful illustrator of La Fontaine’s text, providing at least one drawing for each fable, in some cases two, and in one case even five. While in some instances, he found models for his compositions in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century illustrations of Aesop’s fables (Opperman, op. cit., 1977, II, p. 684), and while other sources can still be discovered, as a whole the series of drawings stands out for its inventiveness and freshness of inspiration. Oudry exploits his talent in depicting ‘as actors performing in established roles in the same way history painters were trained to compose their human actors’ (C. Giviskos in exhib. cat., Los Angeles, Houston, and Schwerin, op. cit., p. 88). But the poems also feature contemporary men and women, and Oudry stages them, both in interior and exterior scenes, like a skilled director. It is perhaps these exterior scenes, many of them in rural settings, that surprise the viewer most when given the opportunity to take in the riches of the album. They offer a unique panorama of the French countryside in the eighteenth century – sometimes realistic, sometimes less so, but always enchanting. They also enrich our understanding of Oudry’s gift as a landscapist in a different way than do the backgrounds in his paintings or tapestry designs, or than his famous drawn views of the park at Arcueil (X. Salmon et al., À l’ombre des frondaisons dArcueil. Dessiner un jardin du XVIIIe siècle, exhib. cat., Paris, Musée du Louvre, 2016, passim). Alongside a smaller number of scenes set in bourgeois houses or more modest farmer’s dwellings, they provide a poetic atmosphere for the amusing tales and moralizing messages of La Fontaine, of which the richness can only be fully appreciated when seeing a great number of drawings in succession. Only the album presented here still provides this possibility, securing its place in eighteenth-century French art as a graphic masterpiece inspired by a literary classic from the seventeenth century.

Figs. 1 and 2. The album’s eighteenth-century binding.

Fig. 3. Gabriel Huquier, after Jean-Baptiste Oudry, The Fox and the Stork. Etching. British Museum, London.

Fig. 4. Jean de La Fontaine, Fables choisies, mises en vers, 4 vols., Paris, 1755-1759 (or 1760). Copy sold at The Exceptional Sale 2022, Christie’s, Paris, 22 November 2022, lot 28.

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