HILAIRE THIERRY (FRENCH, EARLY 19TH CENTURY)
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HILAIRE THIERRY (FRENCH, EARLY 19TH CENTURY)

The Château at Chatillon-Coligny-Montmorency of the Montmorency family, observed through a window from a neo-classical picture gallery

Details
HILAIRE THIERRY (FRENCH, EARLY 19TH CENTURY)
The Château at Chatillon-Coligny-Montmorency of the Montmorency family, observed through a window from a neo-classical picture gallery
signed 'Thierry' (lower right)
pen and brown ink and watercolour
9½ x 12¼ in. (24.1 x 31.1 cm.)
Literature
C.Plante, Inside Out: Historic Watercolour Drawings, Oil sketches and Paintings of Interiors and Exteriors 1770-1870, London, 2000, no. 15.
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

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Lot Essay

The drawing offered here is an evocation of the Château at Chatillon-Coligny-Montmorency lost by the Montmorency family during the Revolution. The drawing was most likely commissioned by Charles Emmanuel Sigismond de Montmorency-Luxembourg (b.1774) who was the last of the great Maréchal line. The vignettes that flank the main vista depict places of exile used by the Montmorency family during the Revolution and include other Châteaux at Neuilly, Epiney and Jouey.
The classically draped female figure with a raised sword is reminiscent of Themis, the embodiment of divine order and justice, who seems to have dramatically raised the Bourbon flag upon the romantic vision of the lost château. The strong architectural framework headed by the Montmorency coat-of-arms articulates the family's allegiance to the legitimist cause in France.

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