The subject of the death of Saint Joseph is relatively rare in Italian art. The episode is not found in the Bible, and indeed the life of the saint in the years after the childhood of Jesus remains something of a mystery. Saint Joseph disappears from the canonical Gospel texts when Jesus is still around twelve years old, after the episode where the young Christ is found debating with the elders in the Temple. Unlike Mary, Joseph does not appear in any New Testament accounts of Christ’s adult life, and he is assumed to have died before Christ began his ministry. Apocryphal texts claim that Joseph died peacefully, at an advanced age and with Jesus and Mary by his side, and as such he is venerated as the patron saint of a happy death.
Among stylistically comparable late drawings by Guercino is a study of Saint Luke Painting a Canvas of the Virgin and Child on an Easel, drawn in a combination of black and red chalk, in the Royal Collection at Windsor Castle. Three highly finished drawings related to an Ecce Homo painting, commissioned from Guercino in 1647 and now in the Bavarian State Painting Collection in Munich, are also comparable, in their use of red and black chalk, to the present sheet. These are a Christ Crowned with Thorns and a Mocking of Christ, both in the Pierpont Morgan Library in New York, and a third Ecce Homo drawing in the Goldman collection in Chicago.
The present sheet bears the collector’s mark of William S. Brough (d.1919), a Justice of the Peace who collected both prints and drawings, and may also have worked as a dealer in works on paper.
Provenance: Sir Thomas Lawrence, London (Lugt 2445), his drystamp at the lower left
Purchased after Lawrence’s death, together with the rest of his collection, by Samuel Woodburn, London, in 1834
His posthumous sale (‘The Valuable and Important Collection of Drawings, By the Old Masters, Formerly in the Collection of the Late Sir Thomas Lawrence, P.R.A., And more recently the Property of that Distinguished Connoisseur, Samuel Woodburn Esq., Deceased’), London, Christie’s, 4-8 June 1860, lot 480 (‘Guercino de Cento…The death of St. Joseph – black and red chalks’)
William S. Brough JP, London and Leek, Staffordshire (Lugt 2652)
His posthumous sale, London, Sotheby Wilkinson & Hodge, 19 May 1919, part of lot 31 (twelve drawings by various artists, including a ‘Death of St. Joseph, by Guercino’)
Private collection, Switzerland
Anonymous sale, Zurich, Koller, 20 September 2008, lot 3411
Nicolas Schwed, Paris
Private collection, New York.
Exhibition: Paris, Nicolas Schwed, Dessins anciens et du XIXème siècle, 2022, no.9.
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