A 'CUIR BOUILLE' PORTRAIT OF LOUIS XIV
A 'CUIR BOUILLE' PORTRAIT OF LOUIS XIV

EARLY 18TH CENTURY, AFTER FRANÇOIS GIRARDON, THE ASSOCIATED FRAME 18TH CENTURY

Details
A 'CUIR BOUILLE' PORTRAIT OF LOUIS XIV
EARLY 18TH CENTURY, AFTER FRANÇOIS GIRARDON, THE ASSOCIATED FRAME 18TH CENTURY
The central oval medallion with Louis XIV facing right wearing armour, on a flower-head filled background and a giltwood frame with molded edge decorated with strapwork and foliate scrolls centered to each side by flower-head cartouches, the leather spandrels possibly associated
44½ in. (113 cm.) high, 36 in. (92 cm.) wide
Provenance
Bernard Combermarle.
Sale room notice
PLEASE NOTE THE PROVENANCE SHOULD INCLUDE SOLD SOTHEBY'S NEW YORK, 23 MAY 2003, LOT 121.

Lot Essay

This repoussé leather portrait probably derives from the circular medallion by François Girardon (1628 - 1715) that featured amongst the bas-relief composition presented by the sculptor to his native city Troyes in 1687. Placed above a mantelpiece in the hôtel de Ville, Troyes, in 1690, the bas-relief remains in situ to this day.

Girardon's celebrated portrait medallion of Louis XIV inspired several contemporary and slightly later versions, including the oval example in marble in the Basilica Saint-Denis, Paris, which was acquired by Alexandre Lenoir in the early 19th Century for the Musée des Monuments Français and subsequently incorporated within the cenotaph to Louis XIV erected in 1843. A further related medallion, executed in repoussé leather, is in the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Bordeaux and one was sold anonymously, Christie's, New York, 18 October 2002, lot 568.

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