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New Discoveries: |
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Eugène Delacroix's Portrait of Charles
de Verninac, 1825-26 |
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| Eugène Delacroix, Portrait
of Charles de Verninac, 1825-26. Oil on canvas. |
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Among notable works of nineteenth-century
art to have appeared recently on the art market is a portrait by Eugène
Delacroix of his nephew, Charles de Verninac. Although unsigned, the painting
is of superior quality and corresponds to Delacroix's style and brushwork
of the early to mid-1820s. An ébauche for the portrait (J. 92) remained
in Delacroix's studio as a souvenir of his young relative. There also exists
a sheet of studies for Charles's head and face, (L. 838). The sheet bears
the stamp of the well-known posthumous sale from Delacroix's atelier. |
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Charles
de Verninac was the only son of Delacroix's sister, Henriette de Verninac.
Delacroix's junior by only five years, young Charles came to Paris from
the country to attend the Lycée Louis le Grand, at which time Delacroix
served as his informal guardian. They developed a close relationship that
continued when Charles studied law in Paris from 1822-1824 and then stayed
to work there. In 1829, Charles joined the diplomatic service, which posted
him to Valparaiso, Chile. He must have treasured Delacroix's painting, for
he took it with him. On his way home, he contracted Yellow Fever in Vera
Cruz, Mexico and died in New York City in 1834. His picture has been in
American collections ever since. |
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Not only is this portrait of
interest for its personal and family history, it exemplifies a significant
but sparsely documented phase of Delacroix's work during which he drew from
British portraiture as a source of inspiration. The most famous work from
this “English” period is the Portrait of Louis-Auguste
[later Baron] Schwiter (ca. 1826, The National Gallery, London),
with which the portrait of Charles de Verninac shares several characteristics. |
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It is well known that Delacroix
visited England for three months, beginning in May 1825, accompanied by
two of his English artist friends, Thales Fielding, and Richard Parkes Bonington,
with whom Delacroix later shared a studio in Paris. Even before 1820, through
his friendships with young British artists visiting the Continent, Delacroix
had taken an interest in both the watercolor and oil techniques associated
with English landscape painting. The story of Delacroix's response to the
display of Constable's Haywain (1821, The National Gallery, London)
at the Paris gallery of John Arrowsmith is well known. Apparently, Constable's
loose handling and transparent shadows encouraged Delacroix to retouch his
Scenes from the Massacres at Chios (Musée du Louvre, Paris),
which he exhibited at the Salon of 1824. |
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In England, Delacroix immersed
himself in British culture, especially the theater, and he made a number
of studio visits to prominent artists. He responded in particular to the
portraiture of Sir Thomas Lawrence. At this time in his career, as portraiture
would have made a significant contribution to Delacroix's income, it would
have been important for his work to be fashionable. At the summer exhibition
of the Royal Academy of Art, Delacroix was impressed by two of Lawrence's
works in particular: the Duke of Wellington (1825, Wellington College)
and the very baroque portrait of young Master Charles William Lambton
(1825, Private Collection). The landscape settings of such pictures had
been a staple of British portraiture since Gainsborough. Lawrence reinvigorated
that tradition through his flashy brushwork. The Master Lambton's very thinly
sketched background is not unlike that of Delacroix's Charles de Verninac;
moreover, Delacroix may have been trying to capture the liquid effects of
watercolor in paint. He made some related landscape watercolors while in
England. |
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Not only do both the Charles
de Verninac and the Schwiter portraits respond to Lawrence's loose brushwork,
they are, like Lawrence's work, full-length or near full-length, a particularly
English mode, with the figure in dandyish dress. Charles has removed his
leather driving gloves, holding them in his right hand which is posed on
a rock in some imaginary romantic woods. His top hat is in his left hand.
Seen against a great gray cloud, his slightly smallish head is framed at
the bottom by a stiff white collar and a jet-black ascot. The hair above
his ears is swept forward, in the style of the romantic Italian portraits
of the previous decade by Delacroix's rival Ingres. This detail differs
from Delacroix's pencil sketches of his cousin, though it is present in
the ébauche. It seems fittingly in sympathy with the potentially
windswept outdoor scene. The pose of the hand upon the rock is reminiscent
of ruler portraits, signifying power. Despite hints of nature's elemental
forces, young Charles will remain in control. |
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One can speculate that the Charles
de Verninac turned out to be an inadvertent dress rehearsal for the
portrait of Schwiter. Delacroix's portrait of Schwiter, an old acquaintance
of Delacroix, was a commission of larger scale than that of Verninac. Delacroix
submitted the Schwiter to the Salon of 1827, from which it was rejected,
undoubtedly because of what seemed its lack of finish; he retouched it in
1830. Although less elaborate than the Schwiter, the Charles de Verninac
is in its original state of execution from 1825-26. |
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Delacroix's Portrait of Charles
de Verninac thus appears to be the artist's first serious response to
Lawrence's style of painting. It is also a further document of Delacroix's
Anglophilia, otherwise well-known from his many subjects taken from Shakespeare,
Sir Walter Scott and Byron. Not only a superb painting in its own right,
the Portrait of Charles de Verninac complements our knowledge of
this important formative phase in Delacroix's career. |
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Delacroix's Portrait of Charles
de Verninac is available through Collins Fine Art, e-mail: rjc@collins-fineart.com,
718-263-9777 phone/fax, www.collins-fineart.com. |
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James H. Rubin,
Stony Brook, State University of New York |
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© 20056 Nineteenth-Century Art
Worldwide and James H. Rubin. All Rights Reserved. |
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