Master Works on Paper from Five Centuries
Master Works on Paper from Five Centuries
St. Jerome in the Wilderness
Vente aux enchères clôturée
July 6, 10:38 AM GMT
Estimation
12,000 - 18,000 GBP
Description du lot
Description
Paul Bril
Breda 1553/4 - 1626 Rome
St. Jerome in the Wilderness
Brush and grey-brown wash over black chalk
188 by 245 mm
Both in frescoes and in drawings, Paul Bril and his sadly short-lived brother Matthijs (who died suddenly in 1583 at the age of only 33) were responsible for many of the most important developments in the landscape art produced in Rome over a period of nearly half a century, between their arrival in the Eternal City in the early 1570s and the rise to pre-eminence of Claude Lorrain.
In a drawing such as this, the attribution of which has been kindly confirmed, on the basis of a digital image, by Dr. Louisa Wood Ruby, we see very clearly the dialogue between the Flemish Mannerist landscape idiom out of which Bril’s art was to grow and the more serene, proto-Claudian style of the drawings for his celebrated Palazzo Pallavicini-Rospigliosi frescoes of 1611-13.1
Of the previously published drawings by Bril, a Rocky Wooded Landscape, in the Uffizi2 and a related drawing in a Swiss Private Collection3, both dated 1608, along with a Wooded Landscape of 1609, in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge4 are perhaps the most similar in handling to this newly identified sheet.
1. For example the study now in the British Museum (inv. no. 2021,7028.1); sold, New York, Sotheby’s, 27 January 2021, lot 31
2. Inv. No. 653P; L. Wood Ruby, Paul Bril: The Drawings, Belgium (Brepols) 1999, p. 103, no. 59, pl. 67
3. Ibid., pp. 103-4, no. 61, pl. 69
4. Ibid., pp. 105-6, no. 66, pl. 74