Thomas Blanchet (?Paris 1614-1689 Lyon)
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… Read more
Thomas Blanchet (?Paris 1614-1689 Lyon)

Time and Truth overcoming Envy and Discord

Details
Thomas Blanchet (?Paris 1614-1689 Lyon)
Time and Truth overcoming Envy and Discord
oil on canvas
27 5/8 x 37½ in. (70.2 x 95.2 cm.)
in a French 18th century carved gilt gesso frame
Provenance
with Chaucer Fine Arts, London, 1987, as Poussin.
Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, Monaco, 30 June 1995, lot 16, as Blanchet, where purchased by the present owner.
Literature
C. Wright, Poussin Paintings - A Catalogue raisonné, London, 1985, no. 151, pl. 174, as Nicolas Poussin.
L. Galacéros-de Boissier, La Fronde des graveurs: languages de l'allégorie a á travers les estampes frondeuses et les images de la Fronde apaisée, Acte du colloque du C.M.R. 17, La Fronde en questions, Marseille, 1988, p. 207.
L. Galactéros-de Boissier, Thomas Blanchet, Paris, 1991, p. 367, no. P154, and pp. 30-31, fig. 6.
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium, which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

Previously regarded as an autograph work by Nicolas Poussin, Christopher Wright (loc. cit.) quoted the stylistic similarities between the present work and Poussin's Landscape with Saint Matthew (Staatliche Museen, Berlin-Dahlem), while also pointing out that 'this composition is an especially successful combination of an elaborate arrangement of figures set in an idealised landscape based on the Roman Campagna'. While Poussin did paint a circular version of Time and Truth destroying Envy and Discord for Cardinal Richelieu in 1641 (Musée du Louvre, Paris), the present work has since been convincingly re-attributed by Lucie Galactéros-de Boissier to Thomas Blanchet. She cites the strong influence Poussin's work had on Blanchet while in Rome during the late 1640s and early 1650s and calls this work 'typique du Blanchet Romain' (loc. cit.) citing the composition, ruins, trees and figures as evidence of Blanchet's hand. To strengthen this argument Boissier makes reference to other pictures by Blanchet such as Cleobis et Biton (Galleria Nazionale, Rome), Alexandre sacrifiant au tombeau d'Achille (Musée du Louvre, Paris), both similarly painted during his Roman period.

Born in Lyon, Thomas Blanchet trained in Paris with Simon Vouet (c. 1635-45) and then in Rome (1645-53), where he was absorbed into the dynamic circle of artists around Nicolas Poussin. In 1654 he created a mausoleum for Reni de Voyer d'Argenson, Ambassador of France in Venice, in S. Giobbe, Venice. By 1655 Blanchet was elected painter-in-chief for the city of Lyon, where he displayed great versatility in many civic projects involving his combined skills as a painter, draughtsman, architect, sculptor and print-maker.

More from Important Old Master Pictures

View All
View All