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Jean Etienne Liotard

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Switzerland (17021789 ) - Artworks Wikipedia® - Jean Etienne Liotard
LIOTARD Jean Etienne Portrait Of A Young Lady, Bust-length, In A Pink Dress Decorated With Rosettes

Christie's /Jul 5, 2011
114,246.52 - 171,369.78
375,392.97
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Variants on Artist's name :

Liotard Jean Étienne

 



Artworks in Arcadja
104

Some works of Jean Etienne Liotard

Extracted between 104 works in the catalog of Arcadja
Jean Etienne Liotard - A Pensive Woman On A Sofa

Jean Etienne Liotard - A Pensive Woman On A Sofa

Original -
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Lot number: 69
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Jean-Etienne Liotard (Geneva 1702-1789) A pensive woman on a sofa tempera on vellum, pen and black ink framing lines on the left and top edges, laid down on cardboard 3¼ x 3 5/8 in. (8.8 x 9.7 cm.) R. Marx (L. 1800b). Alfred Hausammann, Zurich. Madame Behrens-Hausammann, Zurich. Private collection. M. Roethlisberger and R. Loche, Liotard: Catalogue, sources et correspondance, Doornspijk, 2008, vol. I, no. 296, vol. II, fig. 432 (with wrong dimensions). This composition in bodycolour on vellum is based on a lost red and black chalk drawing of which a counterproof survives, now in the Louvre (Fig. 1; inv. RF 1388; A. de Herdt, Dessins de Liotard, exhib. cat. Geneva and Paris, 1992, no. 67). The drawing was executed by Liotard during his travels in the Greek islands and Turkey between 1738 and 1742. As frequently happened with Liotard and also as testimony to the composition's popularity among his patrons, the artist repeated it - adding the richly coloured medallion Ushak carpet from West Anatolia and a still life including a mirror reflecting the opposite wall - after he came back from his travels. Besides the present horizontal work, three upright pastels, all on vellum but of various sizes, are known. One, bearing the date '1749' on the backing board, is in the Musée d'Art et d'Histoire, Geneva (Fig. 2; 23.5 x 19 cm.; Roethlisberger and Loche, op. cit., 2008, no. 190); another is in the Wrightsman Collection, New York (58.5 x 47.2 cm.; Roethlisberger and Loche, no. 295); and the third is in the Rijskmuseum, Amsterdam (Fig. 3; 103.8 x 79.8 cm.; Roethlisberger and Loche, no. 348). A horizontal version, described as 'Une Franque de Constantinople assise sur un sofa, miniature', was exhibited by the artist in 1771. Roethlisberger and Loche (p. 464) identified it as the present work but the significant differences in measurements (17.6 x 20.3 cm against 8.2 x 9.2 cm.) make this unlikely. The large pastel in Amsterdam differs from the others in including a vase of flowers but not the letter on the carpet. Apart from that the versions differ only in slight changes to the colour of the dress, the cushion and the background. This composition has engendered a long-running debate among scholars over issues of dating, chronology, and the identity of the sitter(s). It is known from inscriptions on some of his drawings that Liotard occasionally drew local women in their native dress on his travels through Italy and Asia Minor. The Louvre counterproof does not bear any inscription, but the name 'Mimica' is inscribed on the backboard of the frame of the pastel now in Geneva. Mimica (diminutive of 'Dimitra') was the name of a young woman of Constantinople whom Liotard reputedly wished to marry but whose mother forbade the match. Because of a mezzotint by Richard Houston (1721-1775) showing only part of the composition and bearing the legend 'The Right Hon.ble Maria Countess of Coventry' (Fig. 4; Roethlisberger and Loche, fig. 431a), the pastels have often been identified as portraits of Maria Gunning, one of the famously beautiful Gunning sisters, wife of the 6th Earl of Coventry. In 1988 Danielle Buyssens (Peintures et pastels de l'ancienne école genevoise, XVIIe-début XIXe siècle, Geneva, 1988, under no. 184) suggested that only the Amsterdam version portrays the countess. This theory was rejected by Alastair Laing in 1992 ('Geneva and Paris: Liotard', The Burlington Magazine, CXXXIV, November 1992, p. 749) when he pointed out that the Liotard pastels much more closely resemble one another than they do surely identified portraits of Maria Gunning and that it was common practice for print publishers to add apocryphal names of celebrated figures as captions to images to enhance sales. Recently, Duncan Bull ('Princess, countess, lover or wife? Liotard's lady on a sofa', The Burlington Magazine, CL, September 2008, p. 592-602), who did not know the present work, has suggested that Richard Houston based his mezzotint on the Wrightsman version which could then represent Maria Gunning, and that the Amsterdam version is a portrait of Liotard's wife, Marie Fargues, as confirmed by old documents and its similarity to other portraits of her. It is, incidentally, significant that Liotard omitted the crumpled letter - often signifying the end of a love affair - in the Amsterdam version, replacing it in the right foreground with an elegant vase. According to Duncan Bull, the sequence of the versions could run as follows: 'If the inscription on the Geneva backing board is accepted as autograph [...], then there is no reason to doubt the date it gives. In that case, it was in Paris, in 1749, that Liotard executed the [Geneva] pastel that he entitled 'Mimica', elaborating one of the drawings he had made at Constantinople of which a counterproof survives. In doing so he heightened its proportions, leaving a large area of space above the woman's head and creating an effect that serves to emphasize her melancholic isolation. He also introduced the discarded letter, a rare anecdotal device for an artist who so often presents his figures as if they were objects within a still life. There seems little reason to doubt that Liotard [...] considered this an image of the Greek girl he once had wished to marry [...]. Its composition was in turn used - though with different chromatic emphases, and retaining the letter - for the Wrightsman pastel which must date from between 1749 and 1754/55, whomsoever it may portray. Its size conforms to Liotard's larger portraits and the sitter's face is considerably individualized. It is thus almost certainly a portrait orientalisé, possibly representing Maria Gunning [...]. This is the work that most probably served as the (partial) source for Houston's print. Finally, at some moment after meeting Marie Fargues in Amsterdam in 1756 (but perhaps only after settling with her in his native Geneva in 1758), Liotard portrayed his bride in a format so large that it required two pieces of parchment.' The woman's features in the present work most resemble those in the Geneva pastel (for example, the hair is dark in both versions, while it is fair in the Wrightsman pastel, and almost blond in Amsterdam) and it seems very probable that it is 'Mimica' who is represented. Roethlisberger and Loche dated it 'maybe from Liotard's first sojourn in England'. In his work as a miniaturist Liotard preferred a support of enamel or ivory, but he also produced quite a number of works on vellum (about twenty are catalogued by Roethlisberger and Loche), mostly little oval portraits. His production in this medium spans the largest part of his career, the earliest example known being a portrait of the French author Fontenelle (Roethlisberger and Loche, no. 21) executed around 1734, and the latest a wonderful little self-portrait made circa 1768 and now in the Lewis Walpole Library, Farmington, CT (Roethlisberger and Loche, no. 445). Stylistically the present work most closely resembles the eight miniatures representing the children of King Louis XV (Roethlisberger and Loche, no. 185), which date from 1749-50 while the artist was in France, and a portrait of George Walpole, 3rd Earl of Orford (Roethlisberger and Loche, no. 261) made in London in 1753. It can also be compared with another miniature measuring 5.3 x 6.8 cm., A girl reading (Roethlisberger and Loche, no. 214), another of Liotard's most famous compositions known through at least five versions in pastel and a little work on enamel dated 1752. Interestingly, in the present work and in that on vellum of A girl reading, Liotard has opted for a horizontal format although all the versions in pastel of both compositions are upright. The pose, with its echoes of Dürer's Melencolia I, and the still-life elements, like the mirror, that are associated with vanitas subjects, have led some scholars to see in Liotard's composition an 18th Century interpretation of Melancholy. But according to Perrin Stein (The Wrightsman Pictures, New York, 2005, p. 227), 'while such symbols were undoubtedly consciously employed by Liotard, the narrative touch of the torn-up letter and the sitter's wistful gaze would have summoned up in Enlightenment viewers not so much the abstract concept of melancholy but the pervasive fictional treatments of romance and intrigue set in the harem that were found in contemporary fiction, theater, and art'. Liotard's virtuosity as miniaturist is evident here in the great care he took to render the delicate features, the details of the costume and jewellery, the still-life on the sofa and the intricate patterns of the carpet. In order to model the face he used the highly precise pointillist technique which was so characteristic of his work on enamel or ivory. This attention to detail resulted in an image of exquisite refinement, reaching a degree of clarity that was perhaps not possible in the medium of pastel. The miniature bears on its backing the collector's stamp of Roger Marx (1859-1913), one of the most important French art historians and art critics of his time. Directeur des Beaux-Arts in 1888, he became Inspecteur général des musées de province in the following year, and editor of the Gazette des Beaux-Arts in 1902. He published a large number of articles, and his books include Les maîtres du dessin (1899-1902). The stamp is the one that his widow applied to the works of art not included in the estate sale of 1914.
Jean Etienne Liotard - Portrait Of A Gentleman

Jean Etienne Liotard - Portrait Of A Gentleman

Original
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Lot number: 274
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Description:
Jean-Etienne Liotard (Geneva 1702-1789) Portrait of a gentleman, traditionally identified as General George Cholmondeley, 2nd Earl of Cholmondeley (1666-1733), half-length, in military uniform, perhaps that of the Horse Grenadier Guards pastel 25 1/8 x 20 in. (64 x 50.8 cm.) N. Trivas, untitled monograph and catagloue of Liotard's work, 1936-1938, in the collection of the Musée d'art et d'histoire, Geneva, p. 98. R. Loche and M. Roethlisberger, L'opera completa di Liotard, Milan, 1978, no. 305. M. Roethlisberger and R. Loche, Liotard: Catalogue, Sources et Correspondance, Antwerp, 2008, I, no. 489. Probably London, Royal Academy, 1773, no. 176, with four other pastel portraits by Liotard.
Jean Etienne Liotard - Portrait Of Maria Theresa, Empress Of Austria

Jean Etienne Liotard - Portrait Of Maria Theresa, Empress Of Austria

Original 1780
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Lot number: 618
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Jean-Etienne Liotard (1702-1789) Portrait of Maria Theresa, Empress of Austria (T. 13; R., L. 527) mezzotint, circa 1780, on Johannot laid paper, second, final state, with wide margins, a deckle edge at the left, some spotting and time staining at the lower sheet edge verso showing through recto, a line of old adhesive on the reverse P. 165 x 130 mm., S. 258 x 212 mm. VARIOUS PROPERTIES
Jean Etienne Liotard - Portrait Of A Young Lady, Bust-length, In A Pink Dress Decorated With Rosettes

Jean Etienne Liotard - Portrait Of A Young Lady, Bust-length, In A Pink Dress Decorated With Rosettes

Original -
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Gross Price
Lot number: 77
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Description:
Jean-Etienne Liotard (Geneva 1702-1789) Portrait of a young lady, bust-length, in a pink dress decoratedwith rosettes pastel on vellum 21¼ x 16½ in. (54 x 41.8 cm.) R.E. Summerfield; Christie's, London, 5 December 1989, lot62. THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN (LOT 77) N. Jeffares, Dictionary of pastellists before 1800, London,2006, p. 353, illustrated. M. Roethlisberger and R. Loche, Liotard: Catalogue, sources etcorrespondance, Doornspijk, 2008, I, p. 444, no. 272, II, fig.400. Liotard was invited to London by Lord Bessborough in 1753 andremained in the city for two years, enjoying great success. Hereceived commissions for a large number of society portraits, notleast a series of pastel portraits of the Royal Family,commissioned by Augusta, Princess of Wales. The English werefascinated by Liotard, partly no doubt to the exotic appearance ofhis flowing beard, uncut since his travels in the Orient, butprimarily due to their admiration for the delicacy and high finishof his portraiture. The identity of the present sitter is unknown,but her costume and hair-ornament are echoed in another Englishportrait of the period, that of Miss Bacon (England, PrivateCollection; Roethlisberger and Loche, op. cit., I, p. 443, no. 269;II, pl. 397).
Jean Etienne Liotard - Portrait Of John, Lord Mount Stuart

Jean Etienne Liotard - Portrait Of John, Lord Mount Stuart

Original 1744
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Lot number: 127
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Description:
Jean-Etienne Liotard (Geneva 1702-1789) Portrait of John, Lord Mount Stuart, later 1st Marquess of Bute (1744-1814), half-length, in a blue coat and waistcoat with extensive inscriptions relating to the provenance of the portrait written by the sitter's daughter (on the reverse of the stretcher) pastel on vellum 25¾ x 21½ in. (65.4 x 54.5 cm.) in a carved and gilded rose-crested frame, possibly by the Huguenot frame maker Isaac Gosset, of London Provenance The sitter's daughter, Charlotte Stuart, by whom bequeathed to her nephew Patrick James Herbert Crichton-Stuart; and by descent to the present owner. Lot Notes John, Lord Mount Stuart, was the eldest son of John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute (1713-1792). He undertook a Grand Tour between 1761 and 1765, and in later life enjoyed a distinguished diplomatic career, which led to his creation as 1st Marquess of Bute in 1796. The present portrait was probably executed in March 1761, when Mount Stuart passed through Geneva at the beginning of his Tour. It seems that, having seen and admired the present work, Lord Bute then commissioned Liotard to execute the famous full-length portrait of his son now at the Getty Museum, Los Angeles (inv. 2000.58). Mount Stuart may have sat for this second portrait on a return journey to Geneva in 1763, and in December that year Liotard wrote again to Lord Bute, thanking him for a generous payment. The inscriptions on the pastel's stretcher were written by Charlotte Stuart (d. 1847), the sitter's only daughter by his first marriage. The nephew to whom she bequeathed the portrait was Patrick James Herbert Stuart (who adopted the surname Crichton-Stuart from 1817) (1794-1859), the younger son of her eldest brother John (1767-1794). The present pastel is extremely similar to another portrait by Liotard, showing James (or Thomas) Milliken (M. Röthlisberger & R. Loche, Liotard: catalogue, sources et correspondance, Doornspijk, 2008, I, no. 425, II, fig. 618). Milliken also began his Grand Tour in 1761, and it is likely that on his way to Italy he too stopped in Geneva, where he may have admired Mount Stuart's portrait in Liotard's studio and requested a similar portrait for himself. We are grateful to Marcel Röthlisberger for his assistance in preparing this catalogue note.