Details
LOUIS-JOSEPH WATTEAU, CALLED WATTEAU DE LILLE (VALENCIENNES 1731-1798 LILLE)
The Soldier's Farewell; and The Return
the first: signed with initials and dated 'L.W. 1771' (lower left); the second: signed with initials and dated 'L.W. 1771' (lower center)
oil on panel
9 x 1114 in. (22.9 x 28.5 cm.), each
a pair
Provenance
with Wildenstein & Co., New York.
[The Estate of Ethel Tod Humphreys]; Parke-Bernet, New York, 10 November 1956, lot 405, where acquired by,
Oscar M. Lazrus, New York, and by whom donated in 1964 to,
[The Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA]; Sotheby Parke-Bernet, New York, 7 June 1978, lot 34,
[Private collection, New Jersey]; Sotheby's, New York, 15 January 1987, lot 107, where acquired by the present owner.
Literature
J.A. Donson, 'College art news', Art Journal, XXIV, no. 4, Summer 1965, p. 380.
Special notice
This lot is offered without reserve.
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Lot Essay

Watteau de Lille trained in Paris with Jacques Dumont, and later at the Académie Royale, where in 1751 he was awarded first prize. In 1755, he settled in Lille, where he taught at the school of drawing until his dismissal for his innovative introduction of the study of nude, as was accepted in Paris. He returned to Valenciennes for fifteen years before becoming assistant teacher to Louis-Jean Guéret, director of the school of drawing in Lille, in 1770 (whom he later succeeded in the post in 1778). In 1795, he was chosen to draw up an inventory of works of art seized during the French Revolution from religious foundations and the houses of émigrés, with a view to establishing a museum.

Watteau introduced an annual Salon in Lille in 1773. He was the most prolific artist, described by his contemporaries as "un peintre besogneux", and between 1773 and 1798, he exhibited around 200 works in the Lille Salon. His military subjects, such as the present lot, reveal the influence of his uncle, Antoine Watteau (Valenciennes 1684 - 1721 Nogent-sur-Marne), representing, as they do, the other side of war. The present pair depicts a soldier bidding farewell to his loved ones and him conversing with ladies and telling stories to a group upon his return.

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