A TERRACOTTA FIGURE OF A BACCHANTE, PROBABLY REPRESENTING AUTUMN
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A TERRACOTTA FIGURE OF A BACCHANTE, PROBABLY REPRESENTING AUTUMN

BY JOSEPH-CHARLES MARIN (1759-1834), CIRCA 1780-1790

Details
A TERRACOTTA FIGURE OF A BACCHANTE, PROBABLY REPRESENTING AUTUMN
By Joseph-Charles Marin (1759-1834), circa 1780-1790
Set on an integrally moulded circular plinth; signed at the rear'c.marin'.
Very minor repairs and restorations.
15¾ in. (40 cm.) high
Provenance
Christie's, New York, 11 January, 1994, lot 76 ('The Property of a New York Estate, Bequeathed to an Eastern University').
Literature
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE:
Paris, Galerie Patrice Bellanger, Joseph-Charles Marin (1759-1834), Mar. 1992.
Paris, Musée du Louvre, Clodion (1738-1814), 17 Mar.- 29 Jun. 1992, A. Poulet and G. Scherf, eds., nos. 52-54, pp. 252-264.
A. Radcliffe, M. Baker and M. Maek-Gérard, The Thyssen Bornemisza Collection Renaissance and later Sculpture With Works of Art in Bronze, London, 1992, no. 53, pp. 280-283.
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

Joseph-Charles Marin (1759-1834) was a pupil of Clodion, and although his career straddled the divide created by the French revolution, Marin is best known today for intimate terracotta figures of nymphs which are entirely characteristic of the ancien régime.

The present statuette is closely related to a plaster figure of Erigone by Clodion, created as part of a celebrated decorative interior in the dining room of the château de Maisons in the mid 1780s (Clodion, op. cit., no. 52, pp. 254-259). Both display near identical poses - although in mirror image - and the same swinging sense of movement created by the swathes of drapery and animal pelt. If anything, the Marin terracotta takes this sense of dynamism to an even greater extreme, with the elaborate, nervous drapery folds and the exaggerated silhouette created by the tree trunk against which the figure leans.
The theme was one which Marin re-visited on a number of occasions; there are closely related examples of terracotta nymphs by the artist both in the Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection and (formerly) in the de Poles collection (Radcliffe et al, op. cit., pp. 282-283). The signature on the present lot, although unusual in that it includes the 'c' for Charles, is also to be found on a plaster figure dated 1790, which was included in the Marin exhibition of 1994 (Bellanger, op. cit., no. 12, pp. 46-47).

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