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Hortense Haudebourt Lescot, A Scene in an Italian Country Inn, possibly a Self-Portrait of the Artist with her Husband on their Wedding Trip, 1821 or 1825
Hortense Haudebourt Lescot, A Scene in an Italian Country Inn, possibly a Self-Portrait of the Artist with her Husband on their Wedding Trip, 1821 or 1825
Hortense Haudebourt Lescot, A Scene in an Italian Country Inn, possibly a Self-Portrait of the Artist with her Husband on their Wedding Trip, 1821 or 1825
Hortense Haudebourt Lescot, A Scene in an Italian Country Inn, possibly a Self-Portrait of the Artist with her Husband on their Wedding Trip, 1821 or 1825

Hortense Haudebourt Lescot

A Scene in an Italian Country Inn, possibly a Self-Portrait of the Artist with her Husband on their Wedding Trip, 1821 or 1825
oil on canvas
24 by 20 in. (61 by 51 cm.)
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Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) Thumbnail of additional image
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) Thumbnail of additional image
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 3 ) Thumbnail of additional image
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 4 ) Thumbnail of additional image
Catalogue note “Madame Haudebourt painted by herself…. Truly, is this a painting by a woman? What firmness of tones and in the brush! This is a woman with real talent who again this year seems to have made some progress.” (Augustin Jal, Esquisses, croquis, pochades ou tout ce qu’on voudra sur le Salon de 1827, Paris, A. Dupont, 1828, p. 290) Augustin Jal, in his review of Haudebourt-Lescot’s contribution to the Salon of 1827, expressed amazement at the existence of such an accomplished woman painter. He was not alone in his sentiment; Haudebourt-Lescot was unanimously praised in Paris art circles and considered an equal among her male counterparts and fellow Salon participants. When Haudebourt-Lescot was 24 years old, she travelled to Italy to study art; she remained there for eight years having met such influential artists as Ingres and Canova. The memories of her time spent in Italy and her immersion in the Italian lifestyle remained with her after she returned to Paris in 1816. Painted in 1821, our painting depicts the artist with her husband on their wedding trip (they were married in 1820). The setting is an Italian inn where the newly married couple listen to music played by two itinerant musicians dressed in traditional costume. The background may depict a vista of the Alban Hills. The scene is typical of many of Haudebourt-Lescot’s works, where the focus was on genre subjects or the daily lives of the people, their clothing, customs and traditions. As a new bride, she appears young and care-free in her pretty white silk dress and her festooned straw hat tilting on the back of the chair. This portrayal is very different from the rather austere self-portrait she sent to the Salon a few years later (1825, Musée du Louvre, Paris), where, against a dark background, and wearing the traditional artist’s beret, she modeled herself directly on her artistic forefathers. Haudebourt-Lescot sent a total of 110 paintings to the Salon during her thirty-year career, thereby achieving a level of recognition rarely afforded to a woman artist at the time. In 1829, she modelled for Pierre-Jean-David d’Angers, becoming a part of his pantheon of bronze portrait medallions representing the most illustrious artists and intellectuals of the era.
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Provenance

Shepherd Gallery, New York, 1981

Mr. and Mrs. William Koch, Boston (acquired from the above and sold, Sotheby’s, New York, 24 May 1995, lot 1)

W. M. Brady & Co., New York (acquired at the above sale)

Joan Conway Crancer, St. Louis, Missouri, 1995 (acquired from the above)

Exhibitions

New York, Shepherd Gallery, French and Other European Drawings, Paintings, and Sculpture of the Nineteenth Century, Winter Exhibition, 1980-81, no. 79

Boston, Museum of Fine Arts (on loan, 1981-1995)

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