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The Four Seasons: Autumn: Putti with Goat and Grapes (after Edmé Bouchardon)

French School

Category

Art / Oil paintings

Date

1800 - 1958

Materials

Oil on canvas (oval)

Measurements

1143 x 959 mm (45 x 37 ¾ in)

Place of origin

France

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Collection

Wimpole, Cambridgeshire

NT 207774

Summary

Oil painting (en camaїeu/cirage) on canvas stuck on boards (oval), The Four Seasons: Autumn: Putti with Goat and Grapes (after Edmé Bouchardon), French School, 19-20th century. One of a set of four. These half-heartedly illusionistic paintings are adaptations of the reliefs carved on the Fontaine de Grenelle in Paris by Jaques-Edme Bouchardon, from 1739. Autumn is represented by three full-length putti and a goat. The putto on the left is lying on his back, head to the left, both his arms raised up, a goat on the far left, has reared up on his hind legs and stands over him, the goat is trying to seize a basket of grapes which lies tumbled on the chest of the putto on his back. The putto in the centre stands with his legs apart his right leg forward, and grasps with his left hand the goat's right horn to try to push him off. The third putto is on the far right, kneeling, turned to the right, and gazing at the spectator, he holds a bunch of grapes and vine leaves in his hands. In the foreground a dish with a stem, has toppled over spilling some grapes and vine leaves on the ground. In the background on the left is a tree with leaves and ivy growing on it, on the right background can be seen a wicker fence.

Provenance

Bought by Elsie Kipling, Mrs George Bambridge (1896 - 1976) in 1958 (through Leggatt Bros.) and by whom bequeathed to the National Trust together with Wimpole Hall, all its contents and an estate of 3,000 acres

Credit line

Wimpole Hall, The Bambridge Collection (National Trust)

Makers and roles

French School, artist after Edmé Bouchardon (Chaumont 1698 - Paris 1762), sculptor

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