LAURENT HUBERT (FRENCH, D. CIRCA 1780), CIRCA 1753
LAURENT HUBERT (FRENCH, D. CIRCA 1780), CIRCA 1753
LAURENT HUBERT (FRENCH, D. CIRCA 1780), CIRCA 1753
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LAURENT HUBERT (FRENCH, D. CIRCA 1780), CIRCA 1753
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PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED PRIVATE COLLECTION
LAURENT HUBERT (FRENCH, D. CIRCA 1780), CIRCA 1753

Arria and Paetus

Details
LAURENT HUBERT (FRENCH, D. CIRCA 1780), CIRCA 1753
Arria and Paetus
bronze group
20 ½ x 18 in. (52 x 45.7 cm.)
Provenance
Major General Sir Walter Arthur George Burns, North Mymms Park, Hatfield, Hertfordshire,
his sale, Christie's London, 24 September 1979, lot 18,
with Thos. Agnew & Sons Ltd., London, until 1984,
private collection, United Kingdom,
on loan to the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 1995-2004,
Sotheby's Paris, 20 April 2012, lot 101.
Pelham: The Public and Private Sale; Sotheby's, London, 8 March 2016, lot 121, (£87,500 price realised), when acquired by the present owner.
Literature
S. Lami, Dictionnaire des Sculpteurs de l'Ecole Française au Dix-huitième Siècle, Paris, 1910, p. 437.
A. Oswald, 'Country houses and gardens, old and new: North Mymms Park - I. Hertfordshire, The seat of Mrs. Walter A.G. Burns', Country Life, LXXV, no. 1931, 20 January 1934.
Sculpture and Works of Art, exh. cat. Thos. Agnew & Sons Ltd., London, 1981, no. 9.
Agnew's 1982-1992, London, 1992, p. 186, fig. 171.
P. Sanchez, Dictionnaire des artistes exposant dans les salons des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles à Paris et en province 1673-1800, vol. II, Dijon, 2004, p. 853.
Exhibited
Académie de Saint-Luc, Paris, 1753, no. 47.
Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 1995-2004.

Brought to you by

Lucy Speelman
Lucy Speelman Junior Specialist, Head of Day Sale

Lot Essay

As recorded in the letters of Pliny the Younger, Paetus was a Roman senator involved in an uprising against Emperor Claudius in AD 42. Following the revolt’s failure, he was condemned to death but was permitted the more ‘honourable’ route of taking his own life. Dagger in hand, Paetus hesitated to carry out his sentence and seeing this, his wife Arria grabbed the weapon and stabbed herself, saying the words ‘Non dolet, Paete!’ (It doesn't hurt, Paetus!) thus emboldening her husband to do the same.

Laurent Hubert has chosen to represent this final dramatic moment between the tragic couple, in which Arria retrieves the dagger from her breast and offers it to her husband, who is shown recoiling in shock. Arria’s actions were considered to exemplify honour and self-sacrifice, and the story later became popular among artists, particularly following the rediscovery of the sculpture known as the Ludovisi Gaul in the early 17th century. The ancient marble depicts a man plunging a sword into his chest alongside his dead wife and was thought to represent the couple.

The present bronze is recorded as having been exhibited by Hubert at the Académie de Saint-Luc in 1753 and was described as: ‘Un groupe en bronze de deux pieds de proportion représentant Pétus & Arrie; Arrie présente un poignard à son Mari, après s’en être frappé le sein, lui disant: Tiens Pétus, il ne fait point du mal’ (A bronze group two feet in height representing Paetus & Arria, Arria offers a dagger to her husband, after having struck her breast with it, saying: ‘Here, Paetus, it does not hurt’).

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