Ref: 574
Putto with Birdcage
Ref: 574
Putto with Birdcage
18th Century
50 cm (19⁵/₈ inches)
Attributed to: Jean-Baptiste Pigalle
50 cm (19⁵/₈ inches)
Attributed to: Jean-Baptiste Pigalle
Provenance:
Princely Thurn and Taxis CollectionPurchased directly there, later private collection in Frankfurt am Main
Literature:
Thieme-Becker, Artists’ Lexicon, Leipzig, Vol. XXVII, pp. 32/34.
Description: White marble, gilded bronze.
Jean-Baptiste Pigalle (1714–1785 Paris) came from a family of cabinetmakers. He studied under Robert Le Lorrain and Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne and was influenced by Bouchardon. He lived in Italy from 1734 to 1739.
His works are influenced by both the Neoclassical and Baroque periods.
In1803, a street in Paris, where he had his studio, was even named after him.
A very similar variant of the "Putti with a Birdcage" is in the Louvre in Paris: "Little Girl with an Apple and a Bird," white marble, dated 1784. (RF 1511, acquired in 1910), 43 cm high, 33 cm wide, 36 cm diameter.
One of these variants, "Putto with Birdcage," was commissioned by "D'Armand-Joseph Paris de Monmartel," Marquis de Brunoy (1748–1781), godfather of Madame de Pompadour and court banker.
This marble figure was presented in the "Salon" in 1750.
Jean-Baptiste Pigalle (1714–1785 Paris) came from a family of cabinetmakers. He studied under Robert Le Lorrain and Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne and was influenced by Bouchardon. He lived in Italy from 1734 to 1739.
His works are influenced by both the Neoclassical and Baroque periods.
In1803, a street in Paris, where he had his studio, was even named after him.
A very similar variant of the "Putti with a Birdcage" is in the Louvre in Paris: "Little Girl with an Apple and a Bird," white marble, dated 1784. (RF 1511, acquired in 1910), 43 cm high, 33 cm wide, 36 cm diameter.
One of these variants, "Putto with Birdcage," was commissioned by "D'Armand-Joseph Paris de Monmartel," Marquis de Brunoy (1748–1781), godfather of Madame de Pompadour and court banker.
This marble figure was presented in the "Salon" in 1750.
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