Ange Laurent de La Live de Jully

probably 1759

Jean-Baptiste Greuze

Artist, French, 1725 - 1805

A pale-skinned man sits facing our left as he plays a harp while turning his face to smile at us in this vertical portrait painting. He looks out the corners of his light blue eyes under arched, gray brows. He has a rounded nose, pale pink lips, and a round face. Gray hair is brushed back from his high forehead and curls around his ears. His long fingers rest on the strings of the harp, and the ends of strings curl like wind-loosened strands of hair along the top edge. The man wears a pale mauve-purple cravat, and his snow-white, long-sleeved chemise is untucked and loose around his thighs. The cuff we see is open and folded back over a bright white shirt edged with lace. His dusky rose-pink breeches are unbuttoned at the knee over white stockings. The square-seated chair on which he sits is carved with garlands and floral patterns, which are gilded gold. The seat itself is topaz blue, and it has a low back. A similarly ornamented and gilded table along the back of the room holds a portfolio and roll of papers, the tooled and gilded spines of books, and a statuette to the right. The pale pinkish-orange statuette shows a woman holding a tablet and wearing a long, loose robe and head covering. Her body angles to our left and she looks off in that direction. The wall behind the table is mottled with smoky shades of gray and tan.

Media Options

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Like Jacques Onésime de Bergeret, Lalive de Jully (1725-79) was an influential collector, amateur, and painter in the Parisian art world of the 1750s and 1760s. One of Jean-Baptiste Greuze's first patrons, Lalive is depicted seated on a chair he had commissioned as part of a suite of furniture à la grecque. This furniture subtly reveals Lalive's avant-garde taste in rejecting the curvilinear forms of the rococo in favor of rectilinear shapes and archaeological decor before the full flowering of the neoclassical style.

Greuze placed Lalive in the center of the canvas; his torso twists toward the harp, as his head, shown in three-quarter pose, turns to the viewer. He is casually attired in a white silk dressing gown, a scarf around his neck, and his britches unbuttoned at the knees. The captivating expression, a faint smile and slightly raised eyebrows, further enhances the contrived informality of the portrait. The emphasis on the face and hands counterbalances the rigid series of parallel vertical lines that define the space.

The prominent display of the harp, accompanied by the furniture with the portfolio of drawings and statue of the Erythrean Sibyl in the background, suggests that Greuze has depicted Lalive as a new Apollo, alluding to his patronage of the arts.

On View

West Building Main Floor, Gallery 55


Artwork overview

  • Medium

    oil on canvas

  • Credit Line

    Samuel H. Kress Collection

  • Dimensions

    overall: 117 x 88.5 cm (46 1/16 x 34 13/16 in.)
    framed: 161.9 x 121.9 cm (63 3/4 x 48 in.)

  • Accession

    1946.7.8


Artwork history & notes

Provenance

The sitter, Ange Laurent de La Live de Jully [1725-1779], Paris, probably 1759;[1] probably by inheritance to his second daughter, Louise de La Live, comtesse de Fezensac [d. 1829 or 1832]; by inheritance to her son, Raymond Aimery de Montesquiou, duc de Montesquiou-Fezensac [1784-1867]; by inheritance to his daughter, Oriane Henriette de Montesquiou, vicomtesse [Charles] de Goyon [d. 1887], by 1874 until at least 1885; Alexandre Léon Joseph, comte de Laborde [b. 1853, a descendant of the sitter's brother-in-law], Paris, by 1927; purchased January 1937 by (Duveen Brothers, Inc., London, New York, and Paris);[2] sold 1942 to the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, New York;[3] gift 1946 to NGA.
[1] The painting is undocumented between the catalogue of La Live de Jully's collection published in 1764 (Catalogue historique du cabinet de peinture et sculpture françoise de M. De Lalive, p. 55), and its exhibition in Paris in 1874, when it was in the collection of the vicomtesse Charles de Goyon, a direct descendant of the sitter. The vicomtesse also lent the painting to an exhibition in Paris in 1885. Munhall (in Edgar Munhall, Jean-Baptiste Greuze 1725-1805, exh. cat., The Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford; The California Palace of the Legion of Honor, San Francisco; Musée des Beaux-Arts, Dijon; Hartford and Lille, 1976: 64) follows the Duveen provenance that accompanied the painting on its acquisition by the Kress Foundation in 1942. Eisler (Colin Eisler, Paintings from the Samuel H. Kress Collection: European Schools Excluding Italian, Oxford, 1977: 327, no. 29) comments that there is no "documentary foundation for most of the sequence" between 1764 and 1874 and follows the provenance in L. Clément de Ris, Les Amatuers de Autrefois, Paris, 1877: 401-402. The Clément de Ris-Eisler provenance, in spite of some innaccuracies, remains tenable, especially in its credible presumption that the painting remained with La Live de Jully's heirs. Martha Hepworth of the Getty Provenance Index kindly helped clarify this issue and corrected the Clément de Ris-Eisler provenance (letter of 11 July 1989 in NGA curatorial files).
[2] The painting was lent by Laborde to exhibitions in 1927 and 1935. Duveen Brothers' Paris office cabled on 30 December 1936, asking the New York office if they were interested in "Master's finest man portrait." The purchase followed quickly, as indicated by a further cable of 9 January 1937, requesting cash to pay for the painting and by an entry in the dealer's General Stock Books that reads: "GREUZE - Mons Ange Laurent de la Live de Jully Playing the Harp. Purchased from Mr. Laporte [sic] January 1937." (Duveen Brothers Records, Research Library, The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, accession no. 960015, reel 66, box 186, and reel 103, box 248, folder 13; copies in NGA curatorial files).
[3] See also The Kress Collection Digital Archive, https://kress.nga.gov/Detail/objects/247.

Associated Names

Exhibition History

1759

  • Salon of 1759, Paris, no. 108.

1874

  • Exposition des ouvrages de peinture au profit de la colonisation de l'Algérie par les Alsaciens-Lorrains, Palais de la Présidence du Corps Legislatif, Paris, 1874, no. 207.

1878

  • Exposition Universelle. Portraits nationaux du XVIIIe siècle, Palais du Trocadéro, Paris, 1878, no. 701, repro.

1885

  • Exposition de tableaux, statues et objects d'art au profit de l'oeuvre des orphelins d'Alsace-Lorraine, Musée du Louvre, Paris, 1885, no. 242.

1927

  • Les grands salons littéraires, Musée Carnavalet, Paris, 1927, no. 173, repro.

1931

  • Possibly Exposition de l'art Français, Société des Amateurs d'Art, Paris, 1931, no. 193 (according to the Duveen Brothers prospectus, but unconfirmed).

1935

  • Exposition de l'art français au XVIIIe siècle, Palais de Charlottenborg, Copenhagen, 1935, no. 86.

1939

  • Five Centuries of History Mirrored in Five Centuries of French Art, Pavillon de la France, World's Fair, New York, 1939-1940, no. 227.

1946

  • Recent Additions to the Kress Collection, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 1946, no. 773.

1976

  • Jean-Baptiste Greuze 1725-1805, Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, Connecticut; California Palace of the Legion of Honor, San Francisco; Musée des Beaux-Arts, Dijon, 1976-1977, no. 22, repro. (shown only in Hartford).

1986

  • A Magic Mirror: The Portrait in France 1700-1900, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 1986-1987, no. 12, repro.

2010

  • L'Antiquité rêvée. Innovations et résistances au XVIIIe siècle [Antiquity Revived. Neoclassical Art in the Eighteenth Century], Musée du Louvre, Paris; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 2010-2011, no. 44 (French cat.), no. 28 (English cat.), repros.

Bibliography

1764

  • La Live de Jully, Ange Laurent de. Catalogue historique du cabinet de peinture et sculpture française de M. de Lalive and Pierre-Jean Mariette. Paris, 1764: 55.

1766

  • Hébert, Joachim. Dictionnaire pittoresque et historique. 2 vols. Paris, 1766: 1:124. (Facsimile ed. Geneva, 1972).

1873

  • Duvaux, Lazare. Livre-journal de Lazare Duvaux, marchand-bijoutier ordinaire du roy 1748-1758. 2 vols. Paris, 1873: 1:cclxxxiv.

1877

  • Clément de Ris, Louis Torterat. Les amateurs d'autrefois. Paris, 1877: 401 (reprint Geneva, 1973).

1878

  • Mantz, Paul. "Exposition Universelle: Les portraits historiques au Trocadéro." Gazette des Beaux-Arts ser. 2, 18 (December 1878): 879-880.

1880

  • Goncourt, Edmond de, and Jules de Goncourt. L'art du dix-huitième siècle. 2 vols. Paris, 1880-1884: 407.

1905

  • Mauclair, Camille. Jean Baptiste Greuze. Paris, 1905: 16, 47, no. 1184.

1912

  • Pilon, Edmond. J.-B. Greuze, peintre de la femme et la jeune fille du XVIIIe siècle. Paris, 1912: 38, 53-55, repro.

1922

  • Réau, Louis. Étienne-Maurice Falconet. Paris, 1922: 74-75.

1935

  • L'Amour de l'art 16 (1935): 243, repro.

1939

  • ‎Wildenstein, George. "Cinq siècles d'histoire de France illustrés par cinq siècles d'art français." La Renaissance 2 (May 1939): 17.

1944

  • "Kress Makes Important Donation of French Painting to the Nation." Art Digest 18, no. 19 (1 August 1944): 5, repro.

  • Cairns, Huntington, and John Walker, eds. Masterpieces of Painting from the National Gallery of Art. New York, 1944: 118, color repro.

  • Frankfurter, Alfred M. The Kress Collection in the National Gallery. New York, 1944: 78, repro. no. 79

1945

  • Paintings and Sculpture from the Kress Collection. National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1945 (reprinted 1947, 1949): 167, repro.

1948

  • Wildenstein and Company. French XVIII Century Paintings. New York, 1948: 4.

1954

  • Kimball, Fiske. "Beginnings of the Style Pompadour, 1751-1759." Gazette des Beaux-Arts ser. 6, 44 (July 1954): 62, 63, 64, repro.

1956

  • Einstein, Lewis. “Looking at French Eighteenth-Century Pictures in Washington.” Gazette des Beaux-Arts ser. 6, 47, no. 1048-1049 (May – June 1956): 231-232, pl. 229.

1957

  • Shapley, Fern Rusk. Comparisons in Art: A Companion to the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. London, 1957 (reprinted 1959): 34, 36, 38, pl. 86.

  • Seznec, Jean, and Jean Adhémar, eds. Diderot, Salons. 4 vols. Oxford, 1957-1967: 1:53-54 (rev. ed. Oxford, 1975-).

1959

  • Paintings and Sculpture from the Samuel H. Kress Collection. National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1959: 361, repro.

1961

  • Eriksen, Svend. "La Live de Jully's Furniture à la Grecque." The Burlington Magazine 103 (August 1961): 340-347, repro.

1963

  • Walker, John. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. New York, 1963 (reprinted 1964 in French, German, and Spanish): 317, repro.

1965

  • Summary Catalogue of European Paintings and Sculpture. National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1965: 63.

  • Hawley, James. "French Neo-Classic Furniture." Winter Antiques Show Catalogue, Seventh Regiment Armory, New York (1965): 18.

1966

  • Cairns, Huntington, and John Walker, eds. A Pageant of Painting from the National Gallery of Art. 2 vols. New York, 1966: 2:316, color repro.

1968

  • National Gallery of Art. European Paintings and Sculpture, Illustrations. Washington, 1968: 55, repro.

1969

  • Rensch, Roslyn. The Harp. Its History, Technique and Repertoire. London, 1969: 99-100.

1972

  • Brookner, Anita. Greuze: The Rise and Fall of an Eighteenth-Century Phenomenon. London, 1972: 60, 99, fig. 23.

1974

  • Eriksen, Svend. Early Neo-Classicism in France. London, 1974: 46, 48, 312, 379, pls. 321-322.

1975

  • European Paintings: An Illustrated Summary Catalogue. National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1975: 164, repro.

1977

  • Eisler, Colin. Paintings from the Samuel H. Kress Collection: European Schools Excluding Italian. Oxford, 1977: 325-328, fig. 289.

  • Pope-Hennessy, John. "Completing the Account." Review of Colin Eisler, Paintings from the Samuel H. Kress Collection, London 1977. Times Literary Supplement no. 3, 927 (17 June 1977): n.p.

1981

  • Conisbee, Philip. Painting in Eighteenth-Century France. Ithaca, 1981: 119-120, fig. 93.

1984

  • Walker, John. National Gallery of Art, Washington. Rev. ed. New York, 1984: 338, no. 452, color repro.

1985

  • European Paintings: An Illustrated Catalogue. National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1985: 189, repro.

1988

  • Bailey, Colin B., ed. Ange-Laurent La Live de Jully. A facsimile reprint of the Catalogue Historique (1764) and the Catalogue Raisonné des Tableaux (5 mars 1770), with an introductory essay and a concordance to the French paintings. New York, 1988: xviii, frontis., repro.

1992

  • National Gallery of Art, Washington. National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1992: 172, repro.

2002

  • Bailey, Colin B. Patriotic Taste: Collecting Modern Art in Pre-Revolutionary Paris. New Haven, 2002: 37, fig. 28.

2004

  • Hand, John Oliver. National Gallery of Art: Master Paintings from the Collection. Washington and New York, 2004: 256-257, no. 208, color repro.

2005

  • Baillio, Joseph, et al. The Arts of France from François Ier to Napoléon Ier. A Centennial Celebration of Wildenstein's Presence in New York. Exh. cat. Wildenstein & Co., Inc., New York, 2005: 224-226, fig. 85a (not in the exhibition).

2009

  • Conisbee, Philip, et al. French Paintings of the Fifteenth through the Eighteenth Century. The Collections of the National Gallery of Art Systematic Catalogue. Washington, D.C., 2009: no. 54, 247-252, color repro.

2010

  • Godla, Joseph. "Beautiful Surroundings: The Frames of the Frick Collection." _The Frick Collection's Members' Magazine (Winter 2010): 16.

Inscriptions

On stretcher: three labels encapsulated in mylar and cardboard: "29744"; "GAR..MEUBLE + DEMENAGEMENTS*MAURICE CHENUE 27, Rue de Paris, CLICHY/ no. 37"; "GREUZE/Monsieur Ange Laurent de la Liv[e] de Jully/ 29744 H[.] 46" W. 35"". Two NGA labels and numbers "11075F" and "11434F".

Wikidata ID

Q20178170


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