- 130
Francesco Albani
Description
- Francesco Albani
- The Holy Family in a landscape
- oil on copper, unframed, with brushed inventory number 89, stencilled inventory number 2574 and the later inscription: Luis Carrache on the reverse.
Provenance
Literature
Possibly M. Oretti, Notizie de' professori del disegno cioè pittori, scultori e architetti bolognesi e forestieri di sua scuola, Ms. B.127, c. 1769, Biblioteca Communale dell'Archiginnasio, Bologna, fols 460–461;
E. Van Schaak, Francesco Albani, Ph.D. Diss. Columbia University, New York 1969, Appendix D, no. 60 (under missing works);
C.R. Puglisi, Francesco Albani, New Haven and London 1999, pp. 64, 210, cat. no. 145, reproduced plate XXII.
Condition
"This lot is offered for sale subject to Sotheby's Conditions of Business, which are available on request and printed in Sotheby's sale catalogues. The independent reports contained in this document are provided for prospective bidders' information only and without warranty by Sotheby's or the Seller."
Catalogue Note
At much the same time, at least one and possibly two versions of this composition are also recorded in early French inventories of the seventeenth and eighteenth-centuries. The first of these is as early as 1685, when a painting is recorded in the possession of the Parisian collector Jean-Baptiste Colbert, Marquis de Seignelay (1651–1690), described as '...une Vierge communément appellée la petite Laveuse'.2 This appellation is significant, for it seems to be the first time that the Albani was known by the name which would make it one of the most celebrated of his works in France. The seventeenth-century presence of the picture in France is confirmed by an undated engraving by Guillaume Vallet (1632–1704). This, or a second Parisian version, was then probably subsequently acquired by the Abbé François de Camps (1643–1723). At an unknown date it was purchased by Philippe II, Duc d'Orléans (1674–1723), and it remained in the Orléans collection at the Palais Royal until its dispersal after the Revolution by Louis Philippe Duc d'Orléans (1747–1793).3
In 1798 the Orléans version was included among the pictures sold in London at Bryan's Gallery, as lot 65.4 Here it was one of three paintings by Albani bought by John Maitland (?1754–1831) of Woodford Hall, Essex, and cost 400 guineas. But while the other two, a St John preaching in the desert and a Christ appearing to the Magdalene were included in Maitland's posthumous sale at Christie's on 30 July 1831, the copper of La Laveuse had already gone from his collection.5 The Orléans version thereafter seems to disappear from sight, for it is not listed in any records of art sales in England in the early nineteenth century despite its fame. In our present state of knowledge, therefore, it is not currently possible to identify this copper with any certainty with that in either the Barberini or Maitland collections. The inventory marks on the back of the copper panel (fig. 1)are not matched by any of those in the Italian or French collections, nor by any record of subsequent auction sales in England.
We are grateful to Dr. Catherine R. Puglisi for confirming the attribution to Francesco Albani, following first-hand inspection of the original. She dates the painting among Albani's mature works of the 1640s. Copies are recorded in the Cathedral at Coutances and in the Gemäldegalerie in Dresden.
1. M.A. Lavin, Seventeenth-century Barberini documents and Inventories of Art, New York, 1975, pp. 421-22.
2. C. Le Maire, Paris ancien et nouveau, Paris 1685, III, pp. 265–66. The Marquis was the son and heir of Louis XIV's great minister Jean-Baptiste Colbert (1619–1683).
3. C. Stryienski, La Galerie du Régent Philippe Duc d'Orléans, Paris 1913, p. 172, no. 274.
4. Bryan's Gallery, A Catalogue of the Orleans' Italian Pictures... 26 December 1798 and days following, London 1798, no. 65.
5. Puglisi 1999, cat. nos 94.v.e and 106.v.b. The subsequent history of the Noli me Tangere is unknown until its re-appearance in the Busiri Vici collection in the twentieth-century. The Saint John preaching was apparently purchased by a family member, and passed by descent until sold London, Christie's, 10 July 1992, lot 62. Another version (which also claims the Orléans provenance) is at Bowood. The 1831 sale included eight other paintings from the Orléans collection, including other Bolognese pictures by or attributed to Guido Reni, Annibale Carracci and Domenichino.