Lot Essay
This drawing reflects the sustained engagement of Daumier with the theatre of the courtroom, a subject he returned to throughout his career with unmatched acuity. Informed by early personal proximity to legal environments through his father’s employment and his own youthful work as a bailiff’s errand boy, Daumier developed an enduring fascination with the courtroom as a stage of social performance and authority. His prolonged visits to the Palais de Justice yielded an extensive corpus of works in which he distilled the figures of lawyers, judges, and litigants into incisive typologies, progressively moving from specific anecdotal representations toward more symbolic generalisation. In these works, Daumier deploys an empathetic observation and strong wit to expose the structures of power and vulnerability within judicial culture.
This drawing once belonged to Roger Marx, a pioneering advocate for Daumier’s graphic œuvre at a time when it was still widely undervalued and misunderstood, often dismissed as mere caricature. Marx was among the earliest collectors to recognise the seriousness and modernity of Daumier’s draughtsmanship, assembling an important group of works on paper, which was dispersed at auction in 1914.
This drawing once belonged to Roger Marx, a pioneering advocate for Daumier’s graphic œuvre at a time when it was still widely undervalued and misunderstood, often dismissed as mere caricature. Marx was among the earliest collectors to recognise the seriousness and modernity of Daumier’s draughtsmanship, assembling an important group of works on paper, which was dispersed at auction in 1914.
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