Property from a Private Collection, Connecticut, Sold Without Reserve
Young Mother, Said to be Madame Danloux, Nursing her Child
No reserve
Auction Closed
May 22, 04:37 PM GMT
Estimate
8,000 - 12,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Property from a Private Collection, Connecticut, Sold Without Reserve
François-Guillaume Ménageot
London 1744 - 1816 Paris
Young Mother, Said to be Madame Danloux, Nursing her Child
signed lower left: F Menageot
oil on panel
panel: 10 ¼ by 7 ½ in.; 26 by 19 cm.
Boulanger collection;
Their anonymous sale, Paris, Hôtel Drouot, 6 February 1889, lot 47;
Eugène Féral (1832-1900);
Marius Paulme, by 1920;
His sale, Paris, Galerie Georges Petit, 22 November 1923, lot 67;
Where acquired by "Meyer" for 36,000 francs;
With Galerie Stuker, Bern, 1949;
Anonymous sale, Lucerne, Galerie Fischer, 21-22 June 1968, lot 273;
With J. Böhler, Munich;
With W. Katz, London, by December 1970;
Szeben Peto Foundation, London;
By whom sold ("The Property of the Szeben Peto Foundation"), London, Christie's, 3 December 1997, lot 55;
Where acquired by the present collector.
Le Figaro Artistique 11 (29 November 1923), p. 12, reproduced;
Burlington Magazine 112, no. 813 (December 1970), reproduced plate XLIX;
Panthéon, May-June 1970, reproduced;
N. Willk-Brocard, François-Guillaume Ménageot, Paris 1976, p. 73, cat. no. 23, reproduced fig. 41;
N. Willk-Brocard, in The Dictionary of Art, London 1996, vol. XXI, p. 114.
Paris, Hôtel de la Chambre syndicale de la curiosité et des beaux-arts, Petits Maîtres français du XVIII siècle, 1 - 27 June 1920, no. 85 ("Portrait de Madame Danloux, de passage à Rome").
In the 1920 Paris exhibition catalogue (see Exhibited), this painting was titled “Portrait de Madame Danloux de passage a Rome,” referring to the wife of the painter Henri-Pierre Danloux (1753-1809) who gave birth to a child in Rome in 1788. The identification of the sitter seems to have been based on the fact that Danloux and his wife knew Ménageot well and that the painting, at one time, apparently bore the date of 1788. This date, however, is no longer visible on the picture. Nicole Willk-Brocard (see Literature) points out that the costume of the sitter is more typical of the period from 1783-86 and that the room depicted is furnished in a French style. This suggests that the picture was painted prior to Ménageot’s departure for Rome and, therefore, makes the sitter’s identification as Madame Danloux doubtful. Whatever the exact subject, this charming painting demonstrates Ménageot's skill in producing small format genre scenes, painted with a smooth porcelain-like quality, reminiscent of the northern schools that were so popular with French collectors.1
1. N. Willlk-Brocard, op. cit., 1976, p. 73.
You May Also Like