Items Similar to Portrait of a man during French Revolution
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 10
Circle of Antoine VestierPortrait of a man during French RevolutionCirca 1793
Circa 1793
$26,327.77
£19,577.99
€22,000
CA$36,135.44
A$39,470.99
CHF 20,893.16
MX$474,503.09
NOK 265,582.26
SEK 242,917.64
DKK 167,607.74
About the Item
Antoine VESTIER, attributed to
(Avallon, 1740 - Paris, 1824)
Portrait of a man under the Revolution
Oil on canvas
H. 46 cm; L. 37 cm
Circa 1793-95
This beautiful unsigned portrait instinctively took us back to the stylistic repertoire of Antoine Vestier, notably with this serene face, this simple pose and a striped garment regularly present in the artist's portraits. However, on closer inspection, the work did not seem to present this silky or satiny side in the touch or this little knowing smile which animates most of the faces painted by the Burgundian artist. While possessing a remarkable quality of execution, it had a drier side. We have reviewed most of the portrait painters from the end of the 18th century, famous or less known, but none really corresponded to ours. It was by closely observing a portrait of a woman by Vestier at the National Museum in Stockholm that we finally came back (both by elimination and by rapprochement) on an attribution to Vestier, with the reservations mentioned previously: the material, the complexions, the mouth, the earlobe, the shine work on the nose, the wig with the rollers highlighted with delicate impasto, the writing of the eyebrows, the treatment of the eyelids are really very comparable. As is very often the case with Vestier, the background is neutral, and the whole gives off an impression of sobriety, enhanced by the colors of the elegant garment. As for the model, one would be tempted to see a revolutionary close to Robespierre, whose physiognomy is not so far removed. His kind gaze, both energetic and gentle, challenges the viewer, not without displaying a slight feeling of satisfaction and superiority. Trained under Jean-Baptiste Pierre, Vestier quickly devoted himself to the genre of portraiture, which he first practiced, and prolifically, in miniature. But he began exhibiting quite late at the Salon du Louvre, in 1785, almost at the same time as his reception at the Academy thanks to the support of Joseph-Siffred Duplessis. He was one of the most distinguished portrait painters of his time.
- Creator:Circle of Antoine Vestier (1740 - 1824)
- Creation Year:Circa 1793
- Dimensions:Height: 18.12 in (46 cm)Width: 14.57 in (37 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement Style:
- Period:1790-1799
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:BELEYMAS, FR
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU1857215584242
About the Seller
3.0
Vetted Professional Seller
Every seller passes strict standards for authenticity and reliability
Established in 2017
1stDibs seller since 2022
7 sales on 1stDibs
Typical response time: 5 hours
- ShippingRetrieving quote...Shipping from: BELEYMAS, France
- Return Policy
More From This Seller
View AllMen portrait
Located in BELEYMAS, FR
Jean François Marie Bellier
(Paris 1745 – Paris 1836)
Portrait of a Man
Oil on oval canvas laid flat
H. 45 cm; W. 55 cm
Signed on the left
Circa 1790
Jean François Marie Bellier occ...
Category
1790s French School Portrait Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Presumed Portrait of Jean-Jacques-Blaise Baloin de Belvèse, Baron de Vennac
Located in BELEYMAS, FR
Marianne Loir
(Paris 1705 – Paris 1783)
Presumed Portrait of Jean-Jacques-Blaise Baloin de Belvèse, Baron de Vennac (?-1781)
Oil on oval canvas
H. 54.5 cm; W. 46 cm
Unsigned
Grandda...
Category
1760s French School Portrait Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Presumed artist self-portrait
Located in BELEYMAS, FR
Louis-Gabriel BLANCHET
(Versailles, 1701 – Rome, 1772)
Presumed self-portrait of the artist
Oil on canvas
H. 73 cm; W. 60 cm
Circa 1730
Originally presented in a Restoration period frame with a "Mignard" cartouche, this beautiful painting initially appeared to us as a work from northern Italy. However, it exuded a rather French form of refinement, suggesting that its artist may have assimilated a dual influence from both sides of the Alps.
We thank our colleague and friend Philippe Mendès for spontaneously and judiciously "bringing out" the name of Louis-Gabriel Blanchet, a Romanized French portraitist, whose spirit and stylistic characteristics we clearly recognize here.
Blanchet's "French" years, before his final departure for Rome in 1728, following his winning of the second Grand Prix for painting after Subleyras in 1727, are extremely poorly documented. His father, Gabriel, was valet to Blouin, himself Louis XIV's first valet at the time. According to Thierry Lefrançois, Blanchet was one of the few students of Nicolas Bertin (1667-1736), whose studio he is said to have joined in the early 1720s. At a baptism on March 24, 1724, where he was godfather, he is mentioned as a painter in the picture store of the Duke of Antin, the director of buildings between 1708 and 1736. At this time, he was probably already married to Jeanne Quément, with whom he had a daughter also named Jeanne, who would marry Nicolas Aviet, the son of a valet in the queen's wardrobe, in Versailles in 1738.
When Blanchet arrived in Rome in October 1728, he was accompanied by Subleyras, Trémolières, and Slodtz. He enjoyed the goodwill of Vleughels, the director of the Académie de France, which had been based at the Palazzo Mancini since 1725, even though the latter was not always kind to our resident. From 1732, he was under the protection of the Duke of Saint-Aignan when he took up his post as ambassador to Rome. Along with Slodtz and Subleyras, they formed a trio of friends, joined by Joseph Vernet shortly after his arrival in Rome in 1734. Slodtz and Blanchet, on the occasion of Subleyras's marriage in 1739, were there to attest that their friend was not bound by any marital commitment, and Blanchet was a witness at Vernet's wedding in 1745.
It is most likely from these early years in Rome that our portrait of the artist dates, the expression and turn of his face irresistibly reminiscent of a self-portrait. The still relatively youthful features may correspond to Blanchet's thirty-something years, and the fluffy wig was still fashionable at this time.
The painting fits well with the depiction of a young painter wanting to display both the beginnings of success and a certain simplicity or restraint. A slight smile expresses a form of assurance in this man with a gentle, sincere gaze and a face radiating a keen sense of wit. We find here the air of intimacy present in almost all of Blanchet's portraits, even those from the 1750s and 1760s, as well as an almost complicity with the viewer. The spirit of the painting is quite close to that of the presumed portrait of Bouchardon (painted around 1730) and the portrait of Pannini, painted in 1736, but it possesses a more natural quality, notably thanks to the absence of decorum. Our work exhibits the characteristics of Blanchet's paintings: elegance, luminosity (especially in the whites), vibrant and refined colors (here, the harmony of the garnet of the garment and the slate blue of the background, whose uniformity is tempered by a very sketched landscape and a grove of greenery), light complexions, rather rosy cheekbones, often full lips, and rather tight framing.
According to the Academy's rules, Blanchet's stay should have ended in the spring of 1732, but, for reasons unknown, he remained in the Eternal City until his death, as did his friend Subleyras, with whom he shared accommodation until the late 1730s. The latter regularly called upon him to collaborate on his paintings, such as The Meal at Simon's. Through Saint-Aignan's intervention, Blanchet was employed in the late 1730s by the Stuart princely family, then exiled in Italy. He notably produced copies (now lost) after Liotard of the portraits of Charles Edward and Henry Benedict, the sons of James III Stuart. The latter also commissioned three other portraits (now in the National Portrait Gallery in London), whose more formal character contrasts with the intimate spirit of Blanchet's portraits. Blanchet frequented English painters, such as the landscape painter Richard Wilson, and studied with the Scottish portraitist Katherine Read...
Category
1730s French School Portrait Paintings
Materials
Oil, Canvas
Portrait of a man in armor
Located in BELEYMAS, FR
Attributed to Jacques DUMONT aka DUMONT LE ROMAIN
(Paris 1701 - 1781)
Presumed portrait of Louis-Joseph de Formanoir (?-1732)
Oil on canvas
H. 91.5 cm; L. 73 cm
Signed on the helmet:...
Category
1750s French School Portrait Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Portrait of Madame Leblond
Located in BELEYMAS, FR
French school circa 1815
Portrait of Madame Leblond
Oil on canvas
H. 66 cm; W. 55 cm
Named on the back
Comparable to the works of painters such as Louis Hersent, our portrait, unsig...
Category
1810s French School Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Portrait of a couple
Located in BELEYMAS, FR
Jean-Baptiste SANTERRE
(Magny en Véxins 1651 - Paris 1717)
Portrait of a couple
Oil on original oval canvas
H. 115 cm; L. 90 cm (140 x 115 cm with frame)
Around 1695
Jean-Baptiste S...
Category
1690s French School Portrait Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
You May Also Like
French School 18th century, Portrait of a gentleman, oil
Located in Paris, FR
French School 18th Century
Portrait of a gentleman holding his hat
Oil on paper transferred on wood panel
34 x 27 cm
Not signed which is normal for this type of artwork
In a beautifu...
Category
1760s Old Masters Portrait Paintings
Materials
Oil
Portrait tête d’expression portrait study of a gentleman
Located in Henley-on-Thames, England
French Academic School, 18th century
Portrait tête d’expression study of a gentleman, c. 1780-90
Oil on canvas
46.1 x 35 cm.; (within frame) 57.5 x 46.6. cm.
Provenance:
Private Co...
Category
1780s French School Portrait Paintings
Materials
Oil
18th Century Portrait of a Gentleman French School Man Oil on Canvas Blue White
Located in Sanremo, IT
Painting, oil on canvas, measuring 92 x 75 cm without frame and 102 x 87 cm with frame depicting a nobleman of the French school of the first half of the 18th century.
In its formal...
Category
Early 18th Century French School Portrait Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
18th Century Portrait of a French Aristocratic Gentleman
Located in Vancouver, British Columbia
A fine half length portrait of a powder wigged 18th century French aristocratic gentleman simply dressed in a brown waistcoat over an embroidered buttoned vest in which he has placed...
Category
Antique Late 18th Century French Louis XVI Paintings
Materials
Canvas
French school late 18th Century, Portrait of a young man, oil on metal
Located in Paris, FR
French school late 18th Century
Portrait of a young man
oil on metal
10.2 x 7.7 cm
Framed under glass : 24.4 x 21.8 cm
This small portrait painting, quite original in its technique...
Category
Late 18th Century Old Masters Portrait Paintings
Materials
Oil
Self Portrait of Artist - French 18th century art Old Master oil painting
Located in Hagley, England
This simply superb French Old Master self portrait oil painting is attributed to portrait artist Alexis Grimou. Painted circa 1720 it is a bust length standing portrait of the artist...
Category
1720s Old Masters Portrait Paintings
Materials
Oil
$13,167 Sale Price
20% Off
More Ways To Browse
Texas Revolution Or Alamo Paintings
French Revolution
Antique Rollers
18th Century Portrait Of Woman
18th Century Portrait Of A Woman
Antique Portrait Painting Of Man
Portrait Of A Man French 18th Century
Portrait Canvas Oil Antique Man
1790 Oil Painting
George Bellows Artists
Gobe Joseph
Impressionist Painting Blue Woman
Indian Women Painting
Jazz Musicians Painting
Jules Rene Herve
Mad Magazine
Maria Tort Xirau
Morton Oil Painting













