François Desiré Roulin (1796-1874)

A Carnival Scene (with Medecine lampooned) in Bogota, Colombia

Details
François Desiré Roulin (1796-1874)
A Carnival Scene (with Medecine lampooned) in Bogota, Colombia
signed 'F ROULIN' (lower right)
watercolour
7¾ x 10 5/8in. (19.8 x 27cm.)

Lot Essay

Roulin studied medecine in Paris before travelling to Colombia with Francisco Antonio Zea in 1822. He practised medecine and painted in Colombia though had little success, returning to France in 1828. Many of his Colombian drawings have since been lost. He is remembered for his illustrations to Mollien's Voyage dans la République de Colombia en 1823 (Paris, 1824) which include some of the earliest landscapes produced in Colombia, and for his drawings of Simon Bolivar, from life, which are thought to be amongst the most authentic likenesses of the Liberator.

For further information Roulin, see G.G. Jaranillo, El perfil de Roulin, Notas y documentos sobre el arte en Colombia, Bogota, 1955, pp. 153-59.

Roulin's scene illustrates the street masquerades commented on by Mollien: 'Les divertissemens sont les bals, les mascarades, les combats de coqs et de taureaux, quelquefois le spectacle, et le plus souvent les jeux de hasard ... La pompe qu'on déploie dans les processions, et la multitude des fêtes de l'Eglise, contribuent principalement au délassement du peuple. La Fête-Dieu est celle que l'on célèbre avec le plus d'éclat à Bogota.' E. Mollien, op. cit., pp. 276-8.

More from Topographical Pictures

View All
View All