Godefroy Engelmann I (1788–1839)
“Tête d'Ëtude
d'après le Tableau de St. Etienne”, 1817 after Alexandre Denis Abel de Pujol (1785–1861)
Lithograph on
wove paper
Size: (sheet)
49.4 x 34.9 cm
Lettered in the
plate: (lower left) “E: Parizeau élêve de Mr, David.”; (lower centre) “Tête
d'Ëtude d'après le Tableau de St. Etienne / peint, par Mr Abel de Pujol — Salon
de 1817.”; (lower right) “Lith de G: Engelmann. / Chez Ostervald L’aine’ rue Pavée
St. Andre ‘des Arts No.3”
Condition: crisp
impression in marvellous condition (i.e. there are no holes, tears, folds or
foxing). This is an exceptionally rare and very large lithograph.
I am selling
this exceptionally rare and very large lithograph for AU$139 in total
(currently US$105.85/EUR93.73/GBP80.95 at the time of posting this listing)
including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this neoclassical master print by the artist that
patented chromolithography, please contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com)
and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make the payment easy.
At first I was
perplexed by this beautiful neoclassical portrait, as the inscribed title seemed
to suggest that this finely rendered face with its bare shoulder and cute
kiss-curl was of Saint Etienne (aka Saint Stephen). My bewilderment was not so
much about delicate facial features and mild eroticism in the depiction of Saint
Etienne—who is famous as the first Christian martyr (presuming I have my facts
right)—but rather that Saint Etienne should be a man. Of course, once I translated
the French text and studied the content properly I quickly realised that this
head is a study for a figure featured in Abel de Pujol’s painting: “Preafication
de Saint Etienne” (1817) (see an image of the painting at: http://www.patrimoine-histoire.fr/images/Patrimoine/Paris/eStThomasdAquin/ParSTdA81c.JPG).
To give a
context for the significance of Abel de Pujol’s painting, Stephen Bann (2013)
in “Ways Around Modernism” offers the following wonderful summary:
“Abel de
Pujol's star has waned (to put it mildly), but in 1817 it could scarcely have
been brighter, since the painting [“Preafication de Saint Etienne”] had tied
for first prize in the category of history painting in the first (and last)
major competition of the Restoration, supervised by the Académie des Beaux Arts
at the request of the king himself. In other terms Abel de Pujol's work had
achieved in 1817 just the measure of official acknowledgement that Ingres was
looking for (though not finding) before his success with Louis Ill/ at the
Salon of 1824 and his election to the Académie des Beaux-Arts in the following
year.”
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