Provenance
Possibly the estate of the artist's widow, Marie-Euphémie-Mélanie Cozette de Rubempré [1847-1919].[1] (Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 10 February 1971, no. 48).[2] Private collection, Pennsylvania;[3] (Pegasus Fine Arts, New York, by April 1986); purchased 7 May 1986 by NGA.
[1] Verbal communication via the late Joseph J. Wade from his unnamed source, who obtained it by exchange from yet another unnamed dealer, who claimed it was drawn from the "estate of Chapu's widow." (Letter to Suzanne G. Lindsay from the late Joseph J. Wade [then owner of Pegasus Fine Arts], dated 14 November 1990 [in NGA curatorial files]). No estate sale for either the artist or the widow is documented. According to Annie-Claire Lussiez, Director, Musée Henri Chapu, Le Mée (verbal communication), "a few objects" descended through their adopted daughter, Henriette Bréauté (Madame Gaston Bréauté), but no systematic record of them exists. The death announcement for Madame Chapu is dated 9 April 1919 (Archives, Musée Henri Chapu, Le Mée).
[2] A speculative identification. The auction catalogue entry, which is not illustrated, describes a marble of the same dimensions (90 x 54 cms.). Thus far, the National Gallery relief is the only one that conforms to those specifications. The National Gallery's source for the marble, the late Joseph Wade (see note 1), claimed to have learned of the sale only after the marble entered the museum collection and likewise felt it was the Hôtel Drouot marble.
[3] According to a dealer's brochure from Pegasus Fine Arts, New York (in NGA curatorial files).
Accession Number
1986.27.1
Medium
marble
Dimensions
overall: 89 x 53.5 x 24.8 cm (35 1/16 x 21 1/16 x 9 3/4 in.)
Classification
Sculpture
Credit Line
Pepita Milmore Memorial Fund