PARIS: A painting by the Rococo master Jean-Honore Fragonard not seen in over two centuries has been discovered in eastern France and will be put up for sale in June, the auction house managing the sale said Thursday.
The small oval portrait of a “Philosopher Reading” was discovered hanging high on a wall in a home by an expert at the Encheres-Champagne auctioneers in Epernay, who had been tasked with an estate inventory. The family had not paid any attention to the painting in years, but the expert noticed a barely legible inscription of the artist’s name on the back of its gilded frame.
“Despite the layers of dust and the yellowed varnish, the energy of his painting remains perfectly recognisable,” said Stephane Pinta of the Turquin expertise firm in Paris that authenticated the work.
Unlike the sensual pastel scenes that secured Fragonard’s place in the pantheon of 18th-century masters, the muted illustration of the philosopher poring over his texts was one of just a handful of aged men he depicted. It dates from 1768-1770, when Fragonard was moving beyond his more whimsical scenes of stolen kisses in gardens to explore more contemplative subjects that nonetheless exalted the pleasure of painting.
It also appears to have been executed with the artist’s trademark virtuosity and speed, Pinta said: “The paint seems to be moulded or sculpted, at times even applied directly with a finger.”