Pierre-Paul Prud'hon (1758-1823)

A seated Man crossing his Arms, and a subsidiary study of the same holding a book (recto); Two flying Putti (verso)

Details
Pierre-Paul Prud'hon (1758-1823)
A seated Man crossing his Arms, and a subsidiary study of the same holding a book (recto); Two flying Putti (verso)
black and white chalk on blue paper
10½ x 8 in. (266 x 205 mm.)
Provenance
Comte de Boisfremont (L. 353).
Madame Power; Drouot, 15 April 1864, lot 45 (150 Francs to Lehmann)
Lehmann.
Literature
E. de Goncourt, Catalogue raisonné de l'oeuvre peint, dessiné et gravé de P.-P. Prud'hon, Paris, 1876, p. 175.
J. Guiffrey, L'oeuvre de Pierre-Paul Prud'hon, Archives de l'Art Français, XIII, 1924, no. 870.

Lot Essay

Both recto and verso are related to works executed by Prud'hon in 1801, the former to the family portrait of Rutger Jan von Schimmelpenninck in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam (fig. 1), and the latter to L'étude guide l'essor du génie, a medallion for the ceiling of the Salle des Antonins in the Louvre.
In 1801 Bruun-Neergaard described the medallion in his Sur la situation des beaux-arts en France, ou Lettres d'un danois à son ami: 'Prud'hon a peint depuis peu un plafond dans le salon du Laocoön, au musée des antiques. C'est une allégorie de l'art du dessin représentée par un groupe de deux enfants. On en aperçoit divers attributs. La composition en est gracieuse, et l'exécution parfaite, ce qui n'est pas une chose facile dans ce genre...'.
The drawing was executed during Rutger Jan von Schimmelpenninck's (1761-1825) first term in France as Ambassador to Holland between 1798 and 1802. Schimmelpenninck returned to Paris from 1803 to 1805. In 1924, Jules Guiffrey knew the composition only from a pastel in the Maurice de Rothschild collection, and the picture was published by F. Schmidt-Degener in 1930, Rutger Jan Schimmelpenninck and Pierre-Paul Prud'hon, Gazette des Beaux-Arts, 1930, pp. 87-96. Later, the ambassador's family donated the painting to the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam. A study of the head of Schimmelpenninck remains with the family. On the left of the drawing is a slight sketch of Schimmelpenninck's wife, Catharina Nahuys.

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