John Vanderbank (London 1694-1739)
John Vanderbank (London 1694-1739)

Portrait head study of Don Quixote

Details
John Vanderbank (London 1694-1739)
Portrait head study of Don Quixote
signed 'Jno V 1739' (lower right) and with inscription '...bank/ Study for Portrait of Done Quixot' (lower centre, on the mount, in the hand of Horace Walpole according to a later inscription) and with further inscription 'Dr. Oldfield/ An Ideal Study for the Portrait of Don Quixot. by John Vanderbank' (verso)
pen and brown ink
8 ½ x 6 ¾ in. (21.5 x 17.2 cm.)
Provenance
Willam Bates (L.2604).

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Lottie Gammie
Lottie Gammie

Lot Essay

John Vanderbank's 68 illustrations for Lord Carteret's edition of Cervantes Don Quixote, first published in 1605 and quickly translated into English and French, represent his main occupation during the last decade of his life. Commissioned in 1723, Vanderbank completed his designs, a finished set of which is in the Pierpont Morgan Library, by December 1729 and they were engraved by Gerard Van der Gucht (1696-1776) for publication in 1738. This drawing, made in the last year of his life, appears to follow that group. Its bold, swirling penwork and elaborately scrawled signature and date are highly comparable to a self-portrait of 1738 in the National Portrait Gallery, London.

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