Marketplace
Study of Four Heads
Signed with the artist’s initials, the present sheet was in all likelihood produced as an independent work of art, and such finished drawings by Worldige were popular among the fashionable circles of London and Bath.
This drawing was once part of the large collection formed by Charles Rogers (1711-1784), a member of the Royal Society and the Society of Antiquaries, who was an art historian as well as a collector of prints and drawings. After his death his collection passed to his brother-in-law, William Cotton, and thence to his son, also William Cotton, on the death of the elder Cotton in 1791. The bulk of the collection was dispersed at auction in two sales held over thirty days in 1799, while the remainder, inherited by the third William Cotton, was eventually presented by him in 1850 to the Public Library at Plymouth and is now in the Museum there.
The collection of paintings, drawings and prints assembled by the banker William Esdaile (1758-1837), beginning in the late 18th century, was housed at his estate on Clapham Common on the outskirts of London. Esdaile’s large collection included numerous drawings by such artists as Michelangelo, Raphael, Rubens, Titian, Claude and Gainsborough, and was dispersed after his death in a series of auctions between March 1838 and June 1840.
This drawing was once part of the large collection formed by Charles Rogers (1711-1784), a member of the Royal Society and the Society of Antiquaries, who was an art historian as well as a collector of prints and drawings. After his death his collection passed to his brother-in-law, William Cotton, and thence to his son, also William Cotton, on the death of the elder Cotton in 1791. The bulk of the collection was dispersed at auction in two sales held over thirty days in 1799, while the remainder, inherited by the third William Cotton, was eventually presented by him in 1850 to the Public Library at Plymouth and is now in the Museum there.
The collection of paintings, drawings and prints assembled by the banker William Esdaile (1758-1837), beginning in the late 18th century, was housed at his estate on Clapham Common on the outskirts of London. Esdaile’s large collection included numerous drawings by such artists as Michelangelo, Raphael, Rubens, Titian, Claude and Gainsborough, and was dispersed after his death in a series of auctions between March 1838 and June 1840.
Provenance: Charles Rogers, London (Lugt 625)
By descent to his brother-in-law William Cotton, Leatherhead, Surrey
His son, William Cotton the Younger; Rogers sale, London, Th. Philipe, 15-23 April 1799
William Esdaile, Clapham Common, London (Lugt 2617)
Possibly his posthumous sale, London, Christie’s, 18-25 June 1840, part of lot 1272 (‘Worlidge. Two of heads, in black chalk.’)
Anonymous sale, London, Christie’s, 21 November 1978, lot 53
Pandora Old Masters, New York, in 1999
Private collection, Massachusetts.
Exhibition: New York, Pandora Old Masters Inc., An Exhibition of Old Master Drawings and Oil Sketches, 1999, no.14.
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