Image of Lot
50
REMBRANDT HARMENSZ. VAN RIJN (LEIDEN 1606-1669 AMSTERDAM)
A blind beggar with a boy and a dog
with inscription ‘Rembrant’
black chalk, brown ink framing lines
5 1/8 x 3 3/8 in. (13 x 8.5 cm.)
Estimate: £50,000-80,000
provided by Christie's London. All rights reserved.
A recap of the Summer 2012 season includes the sale which took place on 3 July 2012, during London’s
Master Drawings week an
important group of drawings by Rembrandt and his school found hidden in the
attic of a Scottish house were offered along with 15
sketches by Constable which have not been seen by the public in over 60 years
Christie’s, London is proud to announce the sale of Old Master & Early British
Drawings and Watercolours which will take place on 3 July 2012, during London’s
Master Drawings week. Featuring a selection of works by Old Masters that have
been recently discovered, this auction offers the opportunity to acquire
drawings and watercolours which have not been seen in public for up to 100
years. Comprising 168 lots, the sale is expected to realise in excess of £3
million. Headlining an important group of newly discovered drawings by
Rembrandt (1606-1669) and his school is A blind beggar with a boy and a dog
(estimate: £50,000 – 80,000 illustrated above.) This group of six previously
unpublished drawings was discovered in the attic of a Scottish country house in
2012 and has not been seen for over 100 years.
OLD MASTER DRAWINGS
Benjamin
Peronnet: International Head of Department, Old Master Drawings:
“It is
always a thrill to discover and to have the opportunity to offer for sale
previously unrecorded drawings. This group is particularly exciting as it
includes a drawing by Rembrandt himself and six by his pupils. They offer a
rare overview of his studio practices and how his pupils reinterpreted and
developed his technique.”
The group
also contains works after Willem Drost and by Samuel van Hoogstraten (1627-1678).
An intricate drawing by Ferdinand Bol (1616-1680), Jacob and Rachel, bears all
the trademarks of Bol’s style depicting figures in historic dress and also
shows the strong influence Rembrandt’s work had on Bol (estimate:
£20,000-30,000.) This exceptional group is expected to
realise a combined total in the region of £100,000.
Further
highlights include a rare survival: a cartoon by Michelangelo Anselmi
(1491-1554) for his frescoes in the Cathedral of Parma. The frescoes have since
been overpainted but this cartoon section of Putti dancing with hoops hints at
the elaborate design that once filled the vaults of the Duomo and is the only
surviving segment of the cartoons. It is expected to realise between £150,000
and £250,000. Also on offer is a previously unpublished
drawing by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo (1696-1770) estimated at £100,000 -
150,000. This large-scale drawing includes preparatory studies for the figure
of Mars and for a prostrate captive, both of whom appear in the fresco of
Apollo and the Continents above the main staircase of the Residenz at Würzburg,
considered to be Tiepolo’s greatest masterpiece. Between 1750 and 1753,
Giovanni Battista Tiepolo and his sons Domenico and Lorenzo executed a
monumental decorative scheme in this palace of the Prince-Bishops of Würzburg,
which had been completed only a few years previously.
Coming to
auction for the first time is an exquisite work on vellum by Jean-Etienne
Liotard (1702-1789); Pensive Woman on a Sofa is based on a lost drawing of
which only a counterproof is known, now in the Louvre. One of Liotard’s most
compelling compositions executed on an intricate scale it is estimated at
£400,000 – 600,000. The drawing was executed by the artist during his travels
in the Greek islands and Turkey between 1738 and 1742. The subject sits in a
pose which echoes Dürer’s Melencolia, with a crumpled letter discarded beside
her, symbolizing the end of a relationship. Another pensive figure is seen in
an imposing work by Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840), A Seated Man with a
Telescope on White Chalk Cliffs, in which a tiny figure of a man is shown in a
vast landscape looking into the infinite distance (estimate: £200,000-300,000).
EARLY
BRITISH DRAWINGS & WATERCOLOURS
Among the highlights
of this strong selection of British drawings and watercolours are 15 sketches
by John Constable (1776-1837); the works were rediscovered after being brought
to Christie’s front counter for a routine valuation. These sketches had lain
forgotten in a cupboard for sixty years and include rare working drawings which
shed light on the artist’s method. Led by a moody view of Borrowdale dating
from 1806 (estimate: £10,000-15,000,) the drawings span the
artist’s career and include preparatory sketches for some famous works in
Constable’s oeuvre. Elm Trees in Old Hall Park is an important study which was
made using a sheet of glass and ink. It gives an insight into how the final
work, which is now in the V&A, was created (estimate: £10,000-15,000).
Another drawing, The Stour with Stratford St Mary Bridge, includes a letter on
the verso written by the artist to an unknown correspondant (estimate:
£1,800-2,500). The collection of drawings is expected to realise a combined
total in excess £50,000.
Harriet
Drummond, International Head, British Drawings and Watercolours:
“Such a
rare and interesting group of unrecorded drawings by the Master of English
Landscape, has not appeared on the market since 1988. The drawing of Elm Trees
in Old Hall Park is important as it shows Constable’s very precise technique
developed to accurately record scale when working direct from Nature.”
The
Destruction of Pharaoh’s Host, a large and imposing watercolour by John Martin
(1789-1854) is the epitome of the artist’s extravagant style and range of
vision (estimate £300,000-500,000.) This work, which depicts
the moment in Exodus when Jesus instructed Moses to stretch out his hand to let
back the waters and drown the Egyptians pursuing the fleeing Israelites, has a
depth and fullness of colour designed to rival the power of an oil painting: in
this it represents the development of a movement begun by watercolourists
disgruntled by their treatment by exhibiting societies such as the Royal
Academy at the beginning of the 19th Century. In its bold and elaborate
technique it demonstrates Martin's determination to succeed regardless of his
lack of recognition by the Academy.
A charming
watercolour by Thomas Gainsborough, R.A. (1727-1788), A Cottage with Trees
reflected in a Woodland Pool, is thought to have been completed during the
period when the artist lived and worked in Bath (estimate: £12,000-18,000.) It is one of the earliest of Gainsborough's depictions of a
cottage in a wood, a theme that he was to develop in the 1770s and 80s in the
form of his famous Cottage Door series of paintings. This drawing belonged to
two important Gainsborough collectors: Dr Thomas Monro and William Esdaile.
Monro was an enthusiastic amateur artist and collector and organised at his
London house an evening `academy' at which the likes of Turner and Girtin
learnt by copying from his large collection of drawings and prints. Drawings by
Gainsborough were among those which the younger generation studied and copied.
Esdaile was a banker and connoisseur who purchased much of his collection of
Gainsborough drawings at a posthumous sale of Monro's estate at Christie’s.
Further
examples of Early British Drawings and Watercolours will be on offer at
Christie’s during Masters Week: the sale of Old Master Pictures (3 July 2012)
includes a magnificent and sublime mountain landscape Mont Blanc from Fort
Roch, Val D’Aosta (estimate £1,000,000 – 1,500,000) by Joseph Mallord William
Turner, R.A. (1775 -1851)’s and Andrew Wyld: Connoisseur Dealer (10 & 18
July 2012) comprises 400 lots from the Mayfair gallery of one of the finest
dealers in his field, highlights of which will be on view 31 June – 5 July.