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Nicolas de Largillière Workshop of Nicolas de...

Price Tax incl.:
14800 EUR

Nicolas de Largillière Workshop of Nicolas de Largillière (1656-1746) French school circa 1690-1695 Portrait of a Gentleman Oil on canvas, oval format H. 80 cm, W. 62 cm Original gilded wood frame, richly carved Framed dimensions: h. 106 cm, W. 85 cm Sublime portrait of a gentleman with a rich, vivid color palette. He is depicted at mid-body, turned three-quarter, with his face to the front. His gentle, amiable expression, lively gaze and calm serenity lend the model an intense presence. Wearing an ample wig of curly, powdered hair, the flow of wispy curls cascades over his shoulder, enhancing the regular features of his face, illuminated by intense lighting and delicately nuanced by the gray tones of his emerging beard. Dressed in a shirt with a white lace collar, he wears a lapis-blue velvet jacket with gold thread braiding and a moiré silk lapel. Wrapped in a broad red velvet coat, embroidered with silver thread and lined with brocaded yellow silk, it is held to his chest by a stapled leather strap. A delicate pink ribbon is threaded through the collar of his shirt, the ends falling to the front as it flutters in the wind. Intense lighting, concentrated on the figure, plunges the background of the portrait into darkness. The dominant primary colors of red and blue, chromatically opposed, are astonishingly harmonious, testifying to the artist's bold use of saturated colors to create a vibration of the material itself. The fabrics: brushed velvet with crests illuminated by generous serifs, silk embroidered with a virtuoso brush, lace and embroidery with a fine, precise design. A dazzling feat of color brilliance and refined execution. Our work, painted in Nicolas de Largillière's studio, is imbued with a skilful eclecticism characteristic of this Parisian master. Inspired by the Antwerp Baroque masters Rubens and Van Dyck, Largillière added a spectacular dimension to the portrait, seeking to impress the viewer through sheer aesthetic and chromatic force. We find his colors and traditional style, strongly influenced by Baroque art, in several portraits from this period, such as - Portrait d'un gentilomme, circa 1685, chateau de Parentignat - Portrait of a Gentleman, circa 1690, Atlanta Museum of Fine Arts - portrait of a gentleman, Fondation Bemberg, Toulouse - portrait of the seigneur de Noirmont, 1690, national museum of ancient art, Lisbon, Portugal

Galerie Nicolas Lenté
2, rue des Saints-Pères
75007 Paris