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La
Collection La Caze: chefs d'œuvre des peintures des XVIIe et
XVIIIe siècles
Guillaume Faroult and Sophie Eloy et al.
Paris: Hazan, 2007.
288 pp, 249 color illustrations.
ISBN 978-2-35031-120-3.
Cost: 45 Euros. |
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When Emperor Napoléon III and
Empress Eugénie made a special visit to the Louvre on March
14, 1870, they witnessed the museum's most important donation of the
Second Empire within six months of its fall. The gift of 583 paintings
(275 exhibited) from Paris-based collector Dr. Louis La Caze (1798-1869)
enriched France's principal historical museum with works that remain
among the collection's most important, including: Watteau's Pierrot
(Gilles) , Ribera's Club-Footed Boy, Hals's Gypsy Girl,
Rembrandt's Bathsheba with King David's Letter (1654), Fragonard's
Abbott of Saint-Non (1769), and Chardin's Grace to name
a few. Comte de Nieuwerkerke, Surintendent des Beaux-Arts (1863-70),
and Maréchal Vaillant, Minister of Fine-Arts (1863-70), accompanied
Napoléon III and Eugénie as they admired the collection
installed in the largest room of the musée Napoléon
III section of the Louvre, where the Campana collection was previously
displayed. |
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| Fig.
1. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
Paris. |
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2. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
Paris. |
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3. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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4. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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5. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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6. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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7. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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| Fig.
8. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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9. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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10. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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11. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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12. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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13. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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14. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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| Fig.
15. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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16. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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17. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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18. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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19. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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20. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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21. Installation view of the La Caze exhibition at the Louvre,
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La Collection
La Caze: chefs d'œuvre des peintures des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles,
recently published under the direction of Guillaume Faroult, Curator
in the Department of Paintings, with the collaboration of Sophie Eloy,
provides a significant addition to the growing scholarship on the
important subject of collecting in Second Empire France. Françoise
Maison's catalogue Le comte de Nieuwerkerke and exhibition
at the château de Compiègne in 2000 offered an important
precedent.1 Catherine Granger's L'Empereur et les arts.
La liste civile de Napoléon III published in 2005 also
provides a notable contribution to the study of collecting in France
1852-1870.2 |
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The La Caze book appears at the same
time as the impressive exhibition 1869: Watteau et Chardin…
entrent au Louvre. La collection La Caze reenacts the collection's
original display on a much-reduced scale. The exhibition opened at
the Louvre (26 April-9 Jul 2007) and travels to the Musée des
Beaux-Arts in Pau (20 September-10 December 2007) where the La Caze
family originated. It then travels to London, where it will be seen
at the Wallace Collection (14 February-18 May 2008), created by La
Caze's contemporary Richard Seymour-Conway, fourth marquis of Hertford. |
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The introductory section to La
Collection La Caze includes remarks from the current director
of the Louvre Henri Loyrette, the previous director Pierre Rosenberg,
as well as chief curator Vincent Pomarède, the book's lead
author Guillaume Faroult, and Sylvie Béguin, all of the Louvre's
department of painting. Loyrette identifies La Caze as the most generous
of all of the Louvre's donors in the area of historical painting.
Of La Caze's original donation of 583 paintings, which constituted
his entire art collection at the time of his death in 1869, approximately
one-third of the works remain at the Louvre. The rest have been dispersed
among regional museums, as well as ministerial and ambassadorial offices.
Béguin's "L' 'Hommage à Louis La Caze' de
1869" summarizes the intent of the eponymous exhibition she curated
with the assistance of Claire Constans. Prior to the current exhibition,
it served as the leading tribute to the La Caze donation. Although
there was no accompanying catalogue with in-depth research as the
current publication offers, the curators published an important article
in Revue du Louvre.3 The following sections of the
book present first contextual, and second geographic, approaches to
studying the collection. An accompanying CD-rom includes a complete
catalogue. |
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Section I: Louis La Caze, Un Portrait
Impossible includes thirteen essays by nine different authors
whose work demonstrates how La Caze and his collection provide a rich
scope through which to study the history of the Louvre, and to view
the art market, revivals and artistic practices during the Second
Empire, as well as the doctor's interesting biography. |
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When La Caze decided to bequeath his
collection to the "Musée de Paris" (as the Louvre
was then known), he compiled a hand-written inventory on July 24,
1865 and offered his then 455 paintings. Before his death on September
28, 1869, La Caze collected at a feverish pace and acquired over one
hundred additional works. The terms in which La Caze offered his collection
were so open and unrestricted as to be welcome by any director today.
While he offered his entire collection to the Louvre, La Caze authorized
that any works the museum did not want to accept could be distributed
among France's provincial museums ("S'il en est que le Musée
ne veuille pas accepter, je le prie de les distributer à plusieurs
musées de province)4 (156). Such terms positioned
Nieuwerkerke well when he announced the donation at a curatorial meeting
on October 11, 1869. As Elisabeth Foucart-Walter notes, Nieuwerkerke
could defend the donation to any who criticized some of the less significant
works in the collection. The cataloguing and accessioning of works
structured the hierarchical approach that ultimately left 275 paintings
at the Louvre from the total gift of 583. The remaining works were
sent to the provinces only in 1872 after the Franco-Prussian war and
Commune, when they joined more than 1,000 works sent from the Louvre
to 118 different museums. Each provincial museum was given an average
of between one and four works, except for Pau, which received twenty-nine
paintings because of the La Caze family origins in that city. |
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La Caze also noted in his will that
he hoped the Louvre would dedicate a room to the display of his works
("J'ai l'espoir qu'on voudra bien leur consacrer une salle"),
although this was not a restriction he placed on his donation. On
March 15, 1870 when the collection opened to the public in the former
salle des séances (currently antique bronzes), the display
fulfilled La Caze's wish. This large room on the west side of the
cour carré was then positioned at the beginning of the
painting galleries and the presentation of canvases four rows deep
offered a dense environment that mixed works from different centuries
and countries. This provided quite a different experience from the
separation into schools and periods of the chronological display found
in the rest of the museum. |
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This presentation, organized by curator
Frédéric Reiset, also offered something of the experience
of La Caze's home environment. As a close friend, Reiset was well
familiar with the famously dense ten-row-deep display at La Caze's
home at 116 rue du Cherche-Midi. When François Marcille took
Edmond and Jules de Goncourt to see La Caze's home in May 1859, the
famous literary brothers criticized his display as an eclectic and
unworthy way of displaying a collection. Pierre Rosenberg successfully
diminishes the emphasis that has been placed on the Goncourt brothers'
views, although it reappears later in the text without the same revisionist
perspective. (19, 86) La Caze developed his innovative display after
1853 when he moved from rue Neuve-des-Mathurins to a large home on
rue du Cherche-Midi, an event that also ignited the significant increase
of his purchases in the 1850s. Carole Blumenfeld argues that La Caze
began collecting in his 20s, likely at the shops in the Saint-Jacques
quarter, and was around twenty-six when he bought his first work at
a public sale. Guillaume Faroult believes critic Philippe Burty's
report that La Caze's first purchase was a work by Chardin bought
on the banks of the Seine in 1825 for fifteen francs, although it
cannot be confirmed. |
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Marie-Martine Dubrueil offers a comprehensive
explanation of how La Caze built his collection and she had arguably
the most difficult task of any contributor. Dubreuil's extensive work
with auction catalogues gives evidence of one quarter of La Caze's
works originating in auction sales. She proposes his first auction
purchase as Chardin's House of Cards at the Langlier sale at
the end of 1832. From his early years of more modest collecting and
reselling of works, La Caze bought three times as many works in the
1840s and was active at the prestigious sales of the Aguado, Fesch,
Solirène and Cypierre collections. La Caze did not restrict
himself to Paris-based sales, but also looked to the French provinces
and was well connected even to foreign dealers in London and Brussels.
He often bought from the collections of artists at estate sales and
was attentive to the provenance of his acquisitions. La Caze acquired
works that were formerly in the collections of the marquis de Marigny,
Robert de Saint-Victor, comte de Robiano, and unidentified royal residences
emptied during the Revolution of 1789. |
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Watteau's Gilles (a creative
off-center display of which adorns the cover of this well-designed
book) is likely the most famous work in La Caze's collection and he
bought it surprisingly early, in 1838 from the marquis de Cypierre's
collection. There is evidence that he acquired Ribera's Club-footed
boy the following year for 300 francs. La Caze likely bought Rembrandt's
Bathsheba with King David's letter in 1848 directly from the
son of Casimir Perier before the rest of the collection sold in London
May 5, 1848. With these and other astute purchases, Dubrueil presents
La Caze as a passionate collector who patiently researched his works
and acquired pieces discretely from public sales. |
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In 1860 La Caze's collection became
well known publicly when he contributed fifty-three works to an exhibition
organized by the Martinet Gallery, the history of which is detailed
in an excellent essay by Guillaume Faroult. Louis Martinet opened
the gallery in 1859 and dedicated the first exhibitions to Ary Scheffer
(d.1858) and a presentation of "modern paintings". From
July 10 to December 25, 1860 Martinet worked with dealer and expert
Francis Petit and critic Burty who collaborated to organize an exhibition
of historical French painting for the benefit of the "caisse
de secours des artistes peintres, sculpteurs, architectes et dessinateurs."
In their choice of works, Petit and Burty were undoubtedly inspired
by the poor representation of French painting at the "Art Treasures
of the United Kingdom" exhibition held in Manchester in 1857,
which drew an incomparable total of 1,300,000 visitors from across
Europe. While little is known of the hanging of works or the number
of visitors to the Martinet gallery exhibition of 1860, its emphasis
on eighteenth-century French painting was informed by publication
of the first fascicles of L'Art du XVIII by the Goncourt brothers.
Prud'hon was the most represented artist at the exhibition (fifty-five
paintings and drawings; and interestingly an artist entirely absent
from La Caze's collection), followed closely by Chardin (forty-five)
and Fragonard, while Watteau was the artist whom critics cited most
frequently. La Caze loaned more works to this exhibition than any
other collector and additions to the catalogue reveal how he continued
to offer more works during the course of the five-and-a-half months
of the exhibition. Faroult argues that the significant critical and
public success of this exhibition assured the triumph of eighteenth-century
French art and even influenced public institutions. The example cited
of about the acquisition of three of Chardin's works by the Louvre
in 1867 seems, however, a surprisingly delayed outcome. |
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The Martinet gallery exhibition of
1860 was displayed in the interesting venue of three rooms "dans
le jardin," on the main floor of Lord Hertford's home on boulevard
des Italiens at the corner of rue Lafitte, in one of the most elegant
areas of the city. Lord Hertford's incomparable collection, which
later formed the Wallace Collection, is the subject of Jo Hedley's
interesting study that helps to situate La Caze's collection in a
broader context. While both men were comparable in age (La Caze was
two years older), began their collections at approximately the same
time, and displayed their acquisitions with comparably mixed presentations
of schools and eras, similarities between the collections were necessarily
limited. Hedley explains that La Caze did not have comparable financial
means or the same level of networking agents and dealers, and even
seems to have deferred to Hertford when they purchased works at the
same public sales. Unlike La Caze who collected little contemporary
art (the works by Bouchot, Dedreux-Dorcy, Géricault and Drolling
were likely informed by friendships), Hertford was well known for
his collection of modern French art, particularly academic painting
of the romantic school such as Meissonier and Vernet. Both were avid
collectors of Dutch and Flemish art following the tradition established
during the ancien régime (Teniers, Dou, and Brouwer),
but Hertford preferred landscape and hunting scenes that held greater
ties to his social milieu. Most notably, the two men had diverging
tastes for pictorial techniques. Hertford favored finished surfaces
while La Caze's taste was for technical richness and virtuosity known
as "la tartouille", a term that the book's contributors
confusingly cite as having been in use in studios by 1773 (48) and,
in another instance, as appearing in studios beginning in 1770 (198).
The men's tastes diverged most notably with Chardin whose work Hedley
argues did not appeal to Hertford's aristocratic tastes while La Caze
acquired fifteen works by Chardin (two of which are now considered
to be either after Chardin or by an imitator). |
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Perhaps the most significant difference between
Hertford and La Caze was not the size of their wealth and collections
but the extent to which they opened their respective collections to
visitors. While both made generous loans to exhibitions, Hertford's
collection was otherwise closed to the pubic whereas La Caze received
visitors on Sunday mornings and himself offered tours of his collection.
In the words of Philippe Burty, "He loved artists. He let them
copy anything they wanted to at his house" (129-130). As the
essay by Sophie Eloy and Guillaume Faroult shows, artists including
François Bonvin, Edgar Degas, Henri Fantin-Latour, Edouard
Manet, and Princess Mathilde all executed copies in La Caze's home.
Bonvin said that he went nearly every Sunday during the summer months
and the authors believe it was likely Bonvin who introduced many other
artists to the collection. The exhibition and book successfully convey
the common practice of copying chez La Caze by juxtaposing Bonvin's
Woman at the Cistern with Chardin's Copper Cistern (cat.
figures 92, 94) and Manet's Brioche with Chardin's work of
the same title (cat. figures 106, 107). |
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Guillaume Faroult states La Caze represented
a new type in society, particularly after his death, of "the
collector". This term, which Faroult identifies as then new in
the French language, he defines as distinct from an "amateur"
(an aristocrat or financier) and is a bourgeois figure of more limited
financial means who is also an artist or writer interested in objects
for their historical value (143). The challenges of offering a coherent
study that includes essays by so many different authors emerges around
this proposed definition of a collector. In the following essay Sophie
Eloy's section "From Collector to Amateur" argues that La
Caze increasingly assumed the position of an "amateur" during
the Second Empire when government officials regularly asked him for
advice (151-152). The reader is left unsure of whether La Caze should
be regarded as an important "amateur" or a new type of "collector",
which were previously presented as mutually exclusive personas. |
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La Caze regularly signed the roster of visitors
at Nieuwerkerke's weekly gatherings and in 1855 he was nominated to
the art admissions jury for the Universal Exposition. The two men
were, however, never close, and when Nieuwerkerke visited La Caze's
home in 1862 he surprisingly toured the collection without La Caze.
From 1864 to his death in 1869 La Caze participated in the Salon jury
and once commented on a work under consideration: "It is detestable,
but one bad painting hardly matters in an exhibition, and it could
mean a piece of bread for the poor devil who painted it" (155).
Earlier in 1861 La Caze was part of a committee to review the conservation
and restoration of art at the Louvre following a negative press campaign
about work done under curator Frédéric Villot who resigned
May 15, 1860. From 1861 to 1863 he was also a member of the short-lived
acquisitions committee. |
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La Caze was intimately familiar with the Louvre
collection and Guillaume Faroult argues convincingly that it was in
his youth that La Caze's tastes diverged from the canon of art history
presented by institutions (he also traveled outside France to Germany
[1858], the Hague [1861], England [1857], and perhaps Italy). While
we know nothing of La Caze's knowledge of art history, critics Charles
Blanc, Théophile Gautier, Philippe Burty, Edmond and Jules
de Goncourt and Théophile Thoré (William Bürger)
were all familiar with his collection and Thoré on occasion
advised La Caze on his acquisitions. The burgeoning art press in fact
frames much of the development of La Caze's collection from the foundation
of L'Artiste in 1831 to the beginning of the Gazette des
Beaux-Arts in 1859. However, La Caze's own artistic training emerges
as the most formative influence on the independent path he took in
developing his private collection. |
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Isabelle Hostein addresses the difficult question
of whether La Caze was a student of Girodet or had "passed through
Girodet's studio" (35). Two works by La Caze survive, a Self-Portrait
(cat. figure 11) and Psyche, after Gérard (cat. figure
12), and he studied art while he was a medical student. If La Caze
were a student of Girodet he would have been part of what scholars
describe as the "second generation" (1816-1824) of Girodet
students when the artist's training practices shifted from having
students copy plaster casts and prints in the studio to directing
them to study in museums. The beginning of Hostein's essays seems
to attempt to deconstruct or at least scrutinize the myth of La Caze's
presence in Girodet's studio, but then she concludes with the surprisingly
myth-building statement that while La Caze's attachment to painting
began in Girodet's studio, the development of his tastes was uniquely
his own. |
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After the thorough and interesting essays in the
first section of the catalogue, the studies in the second section
with their focus on national schools are less engaging. The comprehensively
thorough catalogue entries on the accompanying CD-rom seem far more
significant that the brief discussions of the French eighteenth century,
Northern school, Italian baroque, Venetian sixteenth century, and
Spanish and English sections of La Caze's collection. Indeed the very
division of the collection into discrete national sections contradicts
La Caze's original goals of a historically and geographically mixed
display, what Guillaume Faroult describes as a "counter-museum"
and Jacques Foucart previously asserted was intended to fill the lacunae
of the Louvre (188, 25). |
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The Louvre's exhibition of La Caze's works maintained
his wishes until the works were increasingly incorporated into the
rest of the permanent collection. This process began with the Dutch
and Flemish works in 1900, the Spanish paintings in 1921, and continued
with part of the French collection in 1936. The essays that focus
on national schools each outline significant purchases and list notable
changes in attribution, sometimes even between countries as is the
case with the two works La Caze thought he owned by Gainsborough,
that are now assigned to Jean-François de Troy. Jean Habert's
conclusion that La Caze would have had greater success with the Venetian
sixteenth-century portion of his collection (La Caze was wrong about
ten of the eleven works he thought he owned by Tintoretto) if he had
only spent more money seems unnecessarily reductive. |
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The question of attribution emerges throughout
the text, but is not fully addressed. Blaise Ducos is understandably
uncritical of La Caze's acquisition of Rembrandt's Suzanna at the
Bath (Musée du Louvre inventaire #958), which he argues
shows the collector's taste for Rembrandt's style. Marie-Martine Dubreuil
noted earlier in the text that La Caze bought this work in 1846 through
the Alliance des arts, a commercial association founded by
Thoré who presented the copy of Suzanna at the Bath
as a variation on the original. La Caze was justifiably persuaded
by both the work's signature and date (lower left: Rembrandt f.
1647) and his esteem for Thoré's reputation. But the reader
is left uncertain as to how La Caze's selection of works relates to
larger issues of authenticity and the growing market for art in nineteenth-century
France. There appear to have been fewer changes in attribution among
the numerous eighteenth-century French works La Caze acquired (although
this is difficult to determine even after a close reading of the text).
It is not clear, however, if this was the result of greater knowledge
in this area on La Caze's part or that the eighteenth-century works
were less subject to an inflationary market because demand was more
recent. The archival research undertaken for this text was admirably
in-depth and without being overly critical of the impressive final
product, it is necessary to indicate the lack of a coherent analysis
of the question of attribution as it pertains to La Caze's collection. |
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When La Caze bequeathed his works to the Louvre
and France's provincial museums, he offered a collection of 583 works,
275 of which remained at the Louvre and meant not only that French
eighteenth-century painting was finally well represented at the country's
leading museum, but that the national collection was significantly
enriched with important Dutch, Flemish, Spanish, and Italian works.
The estimated value of La Caze's donation in 1869 was 1.5 to 2 million
francs, although Sophie Eloy suggests this figure was low. La Caze
never married and, like Lord Hertford, referred to his paintings as
his children. The breadth and quality of Lacaze's donation to the
Louvre, along with the prizes he established at the École de
Médicine de Paris and the Academy of Science, are the fruits
of his life and demonstrate the passion, intelligence and generosity
of one of the preeminent philanthropists in French history (see figs.
2-21 for images of the exhibition installation). |
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Alison McQueen
Associate Professor of Art History, McMaster University, Canada
ajmcq[at]mcmaster.ca |
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1. Françoise Maison, Le comte de Nieuwerkerke: Art et
pouvoir sous Napoléon III. Paris, RMN, 2000.
2. Catherine Granger, L'Empereur et les arts. La liste civile
de Napoléon III. Paris: École des Chartres, 2005.
3. Sylvie Béguin and Claire Constans, "Hommage à
Louis La Caze 1798-1869 au musée du Louvre," Revue
du Louvre vol.2 (1969): 115-132.
4. All translations are by the author.
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© 20078 Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide
and Alison McQueen. All Rights Reserved. |
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