School of Fontainebleau, second half of the 16th century
PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF ALBIN SALTON
School of Fontainebleau, second half of the 16th century

'Sabina Poppaea': a woman, half-length, en deshabillé

Details
School of Fontainebleau, second half of the 16th century
'Sabina Poppaea': a woman, half-length, en deshabillé
oil on panel
25½ x 20½ in. (65 x 52 cm.)
with inventory no. '962' on the reverse
Literature
Catalogue of the exhibition, Le Cabinet de L'Amateur, Paris, Orangérie des Tuileries, February-April 1956, Editions des Musées Nationaux, p. 12, no. 40.
F. Zeri, La Galleria Pallavicini, 1959, p. 118, under no. 197.
S. Béguin, L'Ecole de Fontainebleau: Le Maniérisme à la Cour de France, 1960, p. 107.
Catalogue of the exhibition, L'Ecole de Fontainebleau, Paris, Grand Palais, 17 October 1972-15 January 1973, pp. 213-214.

Lot Essay

Tacitus (Annals, XIII) describes how the Empress Poppaea, wife of Nero, habitually veiled her face - but only partly - in public 'either because she wished to arouse curiosity in onlookers, or simply because it suited her'. However, the transparent veil, or Roman gauze, was traditionally associated with courtesans rather than empresses. This sophisticated coquetterie provides a perfect subject, given the highly-charged, ambiguous symbolism which was a frequent element of the painting of the Fontainebleau school artists. Iconographically, the composition is one of a series of similar half-length female nudes, a significant innovation of the Fontainebleau school in French art (see, for example, the Double Portrait of Gabrielle d'Estrées and one of her sisters in the Musée du Louvre, Paris, Inv. no. 1937-1).

The present work is a version, with differences, of the composition of circa 1550-1570, in the Musée d'Art et d'Histoire, Geneva, in which the Empress Poppaea stands before a cartouche bearing her name.

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