BARON DOMINIQUE-VIVANT DENON (1747-1825)
BARON DOMINIQUE-VIVANT DENON (1747-1825)
BARON DOMINIQUE-VIVANT DENON (1747-1825)
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BARON DOMINIQUE-VIVANT DENON (1747-1825)

A seated Woman wearing a feathered Hat

Details
BARON DOMINIQUE-VIVANT DENON (1747-1825)
A seated Woman wearing a feathered Hat
with inscription 'Denon' on the album page on which the drawing was attached.
black chalk, pen and brown ink on paper
5 5⁄8 x 3 ¼ in. (14.4 x 8.3 cm.)
Provenance
Part of a large group of drawings by or associated with Denon, assembled in the 19th Century.
Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 4 July 1989, part of lot 150.
W. M. Brady & Co., New York.
Anonymous sale; Christie’s, London, 8 December 2017, lot 267.
Acquired at the above sale.

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Lot Essay

A central figure in Napoleonic cultural policy, Denon was active as a diplomat, writer, archaeologist and draughtsman, and moved within leading artistic and intellectual circles, notably those of the comte de Caylus and Jacques‑Louis David.

During his travels, he kept small sketchbooks in which he captured figures from life, making portraiture a favoured subject, though never a professional pursuit. Few of these drawings survive today, despite their originally considerable number, as evidenced by the posthumous sale (P. Rosenberg, DominiqueVivant Denon, l’œil de Napoléon, exh. cat., Paris, musée du Louvre, 1999-2000, p. 79).

One of a group of sheets assembled in a sketchbook in the 19th century, sold in 1989 and dismembered (see provenance), it may be compared to another Portrait of a seated woman, representing the Duchess of Vicenza and her child, which shares a similar early provenance (private collection; Paris, Le dessin en France, exh. cat., Paris, Galerie de Bayser, 1990, no. 18, ill. p. 28).

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