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The Head of a Young Woman Looking to the Right
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François Boucher

The Head of a Young Woman Looking to the Right

Stephen Ongpin Fine Art

Almost certainly executed as an autonomous work of art in its own right, this fine sheet may be grouped with a number of drawings of the heads of young women that François Boucher produced throughout his career, but particularly in the 1750s and 1760s. These were not portraits as such, but rather intended as idealized types of feminine beauty. As the late Alastair Laing has noted of these head studies, ‘it is a branch of drawing that goes back to the exquisite studies of female heads and coiffure produced in the Renaissance by, above all, Florentine draftsmen; but in Boucher’s hands – and especially in a medium of red, black, and white chalks (“aux trois crayons”) – such studies of women’s heads gained a new immediacy. Sometimes these drawings are studies for, or are derived from, heads in paintings; very often, they are perfectly self-sufficient.’ A number of 18th century French collectors, such as Gabriel Huquier the Elder and Jean-Claude Gaspard de Sireuil, owned large numbers of such drawings of heads by Boucher.

As one scholar has noted, ‘Perhaps more than any other artist of his day, Boucher strove to create an ideal of feminine grace and charm, and if a tête de femme or tête de jeune fille was based on an actual model, it quickly became a generalized type in which all individual features were abandoned, and whose sole function was to please the eye of the beholder...They are not portraits, nor do they show any suggestion of sensuality; their only aim is to express a loveliness which is sometimes merely pretty, but at other times verges on the austere.’ Of such late drawings as the present sheet, the Boucher scholar Françoise Joulie has written that ‘Around 1765, François Boucher...drew women’s faces of a new elegance and serenity; more ‘noble’ than ‘coquettish’...they are easily recognisable by the width of their foreheads, their large eyes under perfectly arched eyebrows and their elegantly curled hair held in place by a ribbon. The mouth is larger, the face has lost its mischievous aspect and exudes a great deal of gentleness.’ Among comparable late drawings by Boucher is a Head of a Young Woman in a private collection.

We are grateful to Françoise Joulie for confirming the attrribution of the present sheet.

Provenance: Anonymous sale, Paris, Hôtel Drouot, 19-20 February 1869, lot 38 (‘Boucher. Tête de jeune Femme, vue de profil, à droite. Joli dessin au crayon noir, à la sanguine et au pastel. H. 20 c. L. 16 c.’, sold for 50 francs)
S. S. Bond, London, in 1932
Alfred E. Pearson, Sheffield and Torquay
His posthumous sale, London, Sotheby’s, 6 July 1967, lot 25 (bt. Agnews)
Thos. Agnew & Sons Ltd., London
Acquired from them by John Green
Private collection.

Literature: L. Soullié and Ch. Masson, ‘Catalogue raisonné de l’oeuvre peint et dessiné de François Boucher’, in André Michel, François Boucher, Paris, 1906, p.115, no.2068 (‘Tête de jeune fille. H. 0m23. L. 0m17 – Vue de profil, à droite. Au crayon noir, à l’estompe, légèrement retouché au pastel. Vente Féral, 19-20 février 1869.’, not illustrated); Commemorative Catalogue of the Exhibition of French Art, 1200-1900. Royal Academy of Arts, London. January - March 1932, Oxford, 1933, p.142, no.648; The Burlington Magazine, June 1967, illustrated p.xxxiii [advertisement]; Geoffrey Agnew, ed., French Drawings of the 17th and 18th Century, exhibition brochure, King’s Lynn, 1985, p.111, no.4, illustrated in colour on the cover; London, Thos. Agnew & Sons Ltd., From Claude to Géricault: The Arts in France 1630-1830, exhibition catalogue, 1986, p.47, no.26.

Exhibition: London, Royal Academy of Arts, Exhibition of French Art 1200-1900, 1932, no.756 (lent by S. S. Bond); King’s Lynn, Fermoy Gallery, French Drawings of the 17th and 18th Century, 1985, no.4 (lent anonymously); London, Thos. Agnew & Sons Ltd., From Claude to Géricault: The Arts in France 1630-1830, 1986, no.26 (lent from a private collection).

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