VITTORIO MATTEO CORCOS (ITALIAN, 1859-1933)
VITTORIO MATTEO CORCOS (ITALIAN, 1859-1933)
VITTORIO MATTEO CORCOS (ITALIAN, 1859-1933)
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PROPERTY OF AN IMPORTANT PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTOR
VITTORIO MATTEO CORCOS (ITALIAN, 1859-1933)

The flower basket

Details
VITTORIO MATTEO CORCOS (ITALIAN, 1859-1933)
The flower basket
signed and dated 'V. Corcos 88.' (lower left)
oil on canvas
38 x 21 ½ in. (96.5 x 54.6 cm.)
Provenance
with Richard Green, London, until circa 1970s, where purchased by the present owner.

Brought to you by

Alastair Plumb
Alastair Plumb Specialist, Head of Sale, European Art

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Lot Essay

Vittorio Corcos began his studies at the Accademia delle Belli Arti in Florence and later under the direction of Domenico Morelli at the Naples Academy.

In 1880, Corcos settled in Paris and began exhibiting at the Salon shortly thereafter. While in Paris, Corcos found no shortage of patronage for his idyllic images of female beauty and was represented by the great dealer Adolphe Goupil who commissioned many of the portraits he is most admired for.

Images of female beauty were so highly prized in the late 19th century, that for the first time there were large numbers of portrait style paintings created solely for the purpose of depicting such beauty. These portraits were not painted so much as to flatter or represent a particular sitter, as they were intended to simply please the eye of the beholder.

Vittorio Corcos, along with other great artists of the Belle Époque such as Jean Béraud, Giovanni Boldini and Paul Cesar Helleu, infused the popular genre of female beauty with a greater sense of style and sophistication. Dress and fashionable interiors complimented these créatures de beauté with a focus on luxe textures and surfaces. Celebrating the prevailing taste for luxury that characterised the time, these pictures were welcome adornments to the walls in the equally opulent interiors of the wealthy.

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