Émile-Jean-Horace Vernet (French, 1789-1863)
Émile-Jean-Horace Vernet (French, 1789-1863)

Portrait of the Widow Comtesse Jean-Henri-Louis Greffulhe, née Marie-Françoise-Célestine de Vintimille du Luc, later Comtesse Philippe-Paul de Ségur (1787-1862), in a Landscape

Details
Émile-Jean-Horace Vernet (French, 1789-1863)
Portrait of the Widow Comtesse Jean-Henri-Louis Greffulhe, née Marie-Françoise-Célestine de Vintimille du Luc, later Comtesse Philippe-Paul de Ségur (1787-1862), in a Landscape
signed and dated 'H Vernet 1825.' (lower right)
oil on canvas
18 1/8 x 15 1/8 in. (46 x 38.4 cm.)
Provenance
Général comte Philippe-Paul de Ségur (1780-1872), Paris, possibly commissioned from the artist in 1825.
By descent through the family of the sitter to Princesse Marie Dorothée Elisabeth Radziwiłł, née Castellane (1840-1915), Paris.
with Galerie Brame & Lorenceau, Paris, circa 1915, acquired directly from the above.
with Galerie Brame & Lorenceau, Paris, by 1990.
with Hazlitt, Gooden & Fox, London, acquired directly from the above, 1990.
Jayne Wrightsman, New York, acquired directly from the above, 1993.
Literature
E. Fahy ed., The Wrightsman Pictures, New York, 2005, pp. 327-329, no. 92, illustrated.

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Lot Essay

Horace Vernet’s evocative portrait of Marie-Françoise-Célestine-Gabrielle de Vintimille du Luc, the widow comtesse Greffulhe, is a striking example of early Romantic portraiture. Drawing inspiration from innovations in English portraiture the artist would have seen firsthand during a trip to England in 1822, Vernet’s portrait uses the landscape to communicate the emotional meaning of the work. Painted in the same year that the widowed comtesse would marry général comte Philippe-Paul de Ségur, Vernet depicts his sitter on a windswept shore, staring into the middle distance with a stoic strength. Her simple white dress seems to allude to her impending marriage, and the work was possibly commissioned by the comte de Ségur in advance of their union. Everett Fahy has suggested that the dark and unhospitable landscape is meant to reflect Célestine’s widowhood, and that her placement on the shore indicates that her rescue from this unhappy state is imminent. Certainly the parting of the storm clouds at upper left, which allows a hint of sunlight to illuminate the foremost plane of the composition, further underscores this reading.

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