Homme assis dans un fauteuil. Artiste : Charles de la fosse (français, Paris 1636-1716 Paris). Dimensions : 12 1/16 x 9 1/8 in. (30,7 x 23,2 cm). Date : fin 17e siècle-début du 18e siècle. Après un voyage en Italie de 1659 à 1664, dans laquelle il a certainement dû son goût pour la couleur, La Fosse est entré Le Brun's studio quelque temps après 1665. Il a travaillé sous sa direction au château des Tuileries, puis contribué à la décoration des grands appartements de Versailles. La Fosse a également créé des hôtels particuliers et des décors pour les églises parisiennes. Quartier animé dans son exécution, ce dessin ne peut pas être con
Cette image peut avoir des imperfections car il s’agit d’une image historique ou de reportage.
Gentleman Seated in an Armchair. Artist: Charles de la Fosse (French, Paris 1636-1716 Paris). Dimensions: 12 1/16 x 9 1/8 in. (30.7 x 23.2 cm). Date: late 17th century-early 18th century. After a trip to Italy from 1659 to 1664, to which he certainly owed his taste for color, La Fosse entered Le Brun's studio some time after 1665. He worked under his direction at the Château des Tuileries and then contributed to the decoration of the grands appartements at Versailles. La Fosse also created décors for private mansions and parisian churches. Lively in its execution, this drawing cannot be connected with a known painting. Although the genre of portraiture experienced a true golden age during the reign of Louis XIV, it was a subject La Fosse treated only on very rare occasions, thus one can assume that this sheet is probably a drawing made for its own sake. Its attribution is based on stylistic grounds, namely the idiosynchratic use of trois crayons, a mixture of red, black, and white chalks that La Fosse would have learned from Rubens and transmitted to Watteau. The sitter, certainly drawn from life, is portrayed three-quarter length, seated in a lavish Louis XIV armchair, and clad in an outfit that suggests a date in the last years of the 17th or the first years of the 18th century, as evidenced by his wearing of a rabat (flat collar adorned with lace) accompanied by lace cuffs called rebras. While the sitter's identity remains unknown, his attire, his wig and his posture all suggest a wealthy and high-ranking man, certainly a gentleman. Against a neutral background, the portrait is animated by the implied narrative of the folded note he offers with his right hand. In contrast to the French tradition of trois crayons portraits (established by the Clouet family at the beginning of the XVIth century), La Fosse does not produce a detailed rendering of the sitter's expression, but rather focusses on his pose and costume, using a brusque application of chalk to lay