The Guercino scholar Nicholas Turner has further written of such genre drawings that ‘they are characterized by a rapid touch, an economy of means, and a remarkable acuteness of observation, many of them clearly based on scenes taken directly from life. The foibles of the men, women, and children of all rank who were his unwitting subjects are captured with great immediacy, which has always given these drawings a special appeal. Although the nobles, gentlefolk, and clergy, largely from his native Cento, came under his powerful scrutiny, the most frequent subjects were the peasant folk, or contadini, for whom it seems the painter had a particular affection.’ Furthermore, as Julian Brooks has pointed out, ‘Given that Guercino travelled little and spent so much of his career in provincial Cento, it is no surprise that his caricatures and genre scenes reflect local life rather than political subjects. A gentle, sensitive humor and humanity characterize his work in this field and indeed pervade his entire graphic output.’
Among stylistically comparable drawings with the same predominant application of brush and wash, and with only a limited use of the pen, is a study of the head of a bearded man in a private collection, as well as a caricature of a man with bulging eyeballs, in the Royal Collection at Windsor Castle.
This drawing bears the collector’s mark of the 19th century French administrator and politician François Régis Alziary, Baron de Malaussena (1837-1905), who owned several drawings by Guercino. The present sheet later entered the collection of the French architect Paul Frantz Marcou (1860-1932), who served as inspecteur général des Monuments historiques et du service des objets mobiliers from 1893 onwards. He began collecting Old Master drawings from quite an early age, around 1880. His interesting and varied collection was made up mainly of 17th and 18th century Italian drawings, as well as sheets by Northern and French artists. On his death in 1932, Marcou’s collection was divided between his two daughters, Valentine (Mme. Jean Trouvelot) and Catherine, later Mme. Henry Dumas. The former presented her share of the Marcou collection, numbering just over two hundred drawings, to the Louvre in 1980. The second half of the Marcou collection, including the present sheet, was dispersed at auction in Paris in 2007 by the heirs of Catherine Marcou and Henry Dumas.
Provenance: François Alziary, Baron de Malaussena, Le Blanc (Indre) and Nice (Lugt 1887), with his associated number 137
Possibly his sale (‘Collection de M. le baron de M.’), Paris, Hôtel Drouot, 18-20 April 1866, possibly part of lot 209 (as Guercino: ‘Bustes d’hommes. Deux dessins à la plume’, sold for 16 francs) or part of lot 208 (as Guercino: ‘Deux figures d’apôtres, jeune homme à mi-corps; homme versant à boire à deux guerriers. Quatre croquis à la plume.’, sold for 20 francs)
Paul Frantz Marcou, Paris (Lugt 1911b)
By descent to his daughter Catherine, Mme. Henry Dumas
Thence by descent until 2007
Marcou sale (‘Seconde partie de la collection Paul Frantz Marcou 1860-1932’), Paris, Hôtel Drouot, 23 May 2007, lot 26 (as Bolognese School, 17th Century)
Jean-Luc Baroni Ltd., London, in 2008
Private collection, London
Anonymous sale, New York, Christie’s, 24 January 2017, lot 37.
Exhibition: New York, Jean-Luc Baroni at Adam Williams Fine Art Ltd., An Exhibition of Master Paintings and Drawings, 2008, no.15.
More artworks from the Gallery