19th-Century Works of Art

19th-Century Works of Art

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 205. Dressing the Bride.

Property of a Gentleman

Rudolf Ernst

Dressing the Bride

Lot Closed

October 20, 06:05 PM GMT

Estimate

30,000 - 40,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Property of a Gentleman 

Rudolf Ernst

Austrian

1854-1932

Dressing the Bride


signed, dated and inscribed R. Ernst. 1882 Paris (lower right)

oil on canvas

canvas: 31 by 20 1/4 in.; 79 by 51.7 cm

framed: 38 1/2 by 27 1/3 in.; 98 by 69.5 cm

Henry P. McIlhenny, Philadelphia

his Sale: Christie's, New York, 20 May 1987, lot 163

Sale: Sotheby's, New York, 22 May 2018, lot 75

Born in Vienna in 1854, Rudolf Ernst was the son of the architectural painter Leopold Ernst. After attending the Vienna Academy in 1869 and exhibiting in Munich he traveled to Italy in 1874. As early as 1876 Ernst decided to settle in Paris where he would exhibit at the Salon des Artistes Français for the following six decades.


American connoisseur Henry P. McIlhenny (1910-1986) served the Philadelphia Museum of Art for fifty years, first as Curator of Decorative Arts and later as Chairman of the Board of Trustees. His remarkable collection of 19th-century paintings, by artists such as Jacques-Louis David, Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot and Edgar Degas, was housed in his Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia townhouse and Glenvagh Castle, his country estate in Ireland (a fitting location for his important Victorian art), joining neoclassical and Empire furniture and Anglo-Indian objects among many other works representing his many passions. In 1986, around 450 objects from McIlhenny’s collection were bequeathed to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, a transformative gift and lasting testament to his expansive interests and keen eye.