Details
ATTRIBUTED TO ARTUS QUELLINUS THE YOUNGER (SINT-TRUIDEN 1625-1700 ANTWERP)
Design for a statue of the Virgin and Child, standing on a corbel, and a coat-of-arms (recto); Fragment of architectural studies (verso)
red chalk, light brown wash, heightened with white, on three joined sheets, traces of pen and brown ink framing lines (recto); red chalk (verso), fragmentary watermark fleur-de-lys
1518 x 538 in. (38.3 x 13.6 cm)
Provenance
Edward Addison Wrangham (1928-2009); Sotheby's, London, 22 July 1965, lot 147 (part).
Michael Jaffé (1923-1997), Cambridge and by descent to his heirs; Christie’s, London, 27 November - 5 December 2019, lot 17 (part).
Acquired by the present owner from the above sale.
Literature
R. Fabri and P. Lombaerde, Rubens. The Jesuit Church of Antwerp, London and Turnhout, 2018, p. 164, no. 7a, fig. 70 (as copy after Rubens).
Exhibited
Mougins, Musée d'Art Classique, 2020 - 2023 (Inv. no. MMoCA221MA)
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Lot Essay

This monumental design can be convincingly attributed to one of the most gifted Flemish sculptors of the seventeenth century, Artus Quellinus the Younger, based on a comparison with a drawing at the Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen (inv. KKSgb5291; see F. Baudouin in Tekeningen uit de 17e en 18e eeuw. De verzameling Van Herck, Brussels, 2000, p. 39, ill. p. 41). This latter sheet, the verso of which is inscribed, signed and dated 1665 by the artist, can be considered one of the few secure works on paper by his hand. Although its technique differs from that of the present sheet, the angular facial features of the women, the more rounded ones of the putti, and the decisiveness of the white heightening are closely related. If the drawing offered here can be dated around the same time as the Copenhagen sheet, it dates from after Quellinus’s extended sojourns in Italy and Amsterdam, where he was responsible for the extensive sculptural decoration of Amsterdam’s new town hall. The drawing may have been the design for a funerary monument, comparable to the statue of Saint Rosa of Lima holding the Christ Child in the Sint-Pauluskerk in Antwerp, dated 1665-1670 (P. Philippot and D. Vautier in P. Philippot et al., L’Architecture religieuse et la sculpture baroques dans les Pays-Bas meridionaux et la Principauté de Liège, 1600-1700, Brussels, 2003, pp. 397, 398, fig. 2). Similar sculptures of the Virgin and Child by Quellinus can be found in the Onze-Lieve-Vrouwekerk in Sint-Truiden (the artist’s birthplace), and the Sint-Lambertuskerk in Heist-op-den-Berg.

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