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Lot 86: A Pair of Belgian Over Life-Size Terracotta Busts of a Bacchanalian Figure and a Faun, Signed by Gilles-Lambert Godecharle (1750-1835), One Dated 1781

Est: $80,000 USD - $120,000 USD
Sotheby'sNew York, NY, USJune 04, 2009

Item Overview

Description

both signed Godecharle at the front lower edge of the drapery, the bacchanalian figure also dated 1781.

Dimensions

measurements note heights 36 1/2 in., 38 in.; 92.7 cm, 96.5 cm

Literature

M. Devigne, "Laurent Delvaux et ses eleves,", in Memoires de L'Academie Royale de Belgique, Brussels, 1928

Provenance

Château de Meudon, Neder-ver-Heembeck, BrusselsCollection of Raymond Vaxelaire, Brussels, 1928Daniel Katz, Ltd. London, 1990

Notes

PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE AMERICAN COLLECTION
The present busts were most likely commissioned for the château of a prominent Belgian family. In her authoritative study of Godecharle's career, Devigne (op.cit.) explains that the chateau de Meuden (destroyed in 1930) was the property of chevalier Antoine-Jean-Hyacinthe de Beughem de Capelle, a member of a prominent patrician family in Brussels. In 1776 he sold the castle to Augustin-Juste Scockaert, comte de Tiremont. Baron de Gaesbeek.de Beughem later repossessed the property and his heirs sold the castle to an M. Benard who later sold it to a Mme la baronne de Haultepenne, née Vandewerve in 1844. Godecharle's style of modeling combines the baroque, rococo and neo-classical and he often reinterpreted the work of the masters, such as Bernini and Houdon. He also studied classical antiquity during his sojourn in Rome in 1773 where Godecharle clearly familiarized himself with the Apollo Belvedere, after which this bacchanalian bust is modeled. The robust faun recalls the tradition of Flemish 17υth century terracotta sculpture with its engaging and caricatured expression. In the present busts, a sense of honesty and immediacy is apparent, underscored by the lively treatment of the eyes, a characteristic also evident in Godecharle's portrait busts, see J. van Lennep, Catalogue de La Sculture. Artists nes entre 1750 et 1882, Musée Royaux des Beaux-Arts de Belgique, Brussels, 1992, pp. 227-233. Gilles-Lambert Godecharle was the most gifted of Laurent Delvaux's students. He was accepted by the Academie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture and subsequently worked with the most prominent French and Netherlandish sculptors of the 18υth century including Houdon, Pigalle and the Antwerp sculptor Tassaert (with whom he worked for Frederick the Great in Berlin). His most important independent commission in Brussels was the program of decorative sculpture for the Parc and Place Royale, commissioned by Charles de Lorraine and begun in 1780. In 1781, the year these busts were made, Godecharle gained an important public commission for the pediment of the Palais de la Nation which brought him great recognition. He was quickly requested to work on the façade and interior decoration of the Palais de Laeken by the Arch Duchess Marie-Christine in which he depicted subjects like the Months and various mythological scenes and figures, likely similar to the present pair of busts. See A. Jacobs, Lauren Delvaux, Paris , 1999, and A. Wauters, Histoire des environs de Bruxelles, Brussels (1855), reprinted 1972.

Auction Details

Old Master Paintings, European Sculpture & Antiquities

by
Sotheby's
June 04, 2009, 12:00 AM EST

1334 York Avenue, New York, NY, 10021, US