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Attributed to Jacques Antoine Vallin

Auction Lot 75 (40041072)
Attributed to JACQUES ANTOINE VALLIN (Paris, c, 1760- 1835).
"Portrait of lady as Erigone".
Oil on canvas. Relined.
Measurements: 60 x 50 cm; 76 x 67 cm (frame).

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Estimated Value : 17,000 - 18,000 €


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DESCRIPTION

Attributed to JACQUES ANTOINE VALLIN (Paris, c, 1760- 1835).
"Portrait of lady as Erigone".
Oil on canvas. Relined.
Measurements: 60 x 50 cm; 76 x 67 cm (frame).
This painting is part of a widespread practice in European painting in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century: the representation of elite women as figures from classical mythology. This iconographic strategy, far from being a mere decorative whim, responded to a sophisticated symbolic construction of female identity in court and post-revolutionary culture. By adopting the appearance of a goddess or heroine, in this case Erígone, associated with the myth of the vine and filial tragedy, the portrayed woman was linked to values such as ideal beauty, virtue, fertility or even poetic melancholy, elevating her image to the plane of the timeless.
Vallin's career provides a better understanding of the stylistic context of the work. Trained at the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture from a very young age thanks to the support of Gabriel Doyen, and a disciple of artists such as Nicolas Guy Brenet, Antoine François Callet and Antoine Renou, Vallin was formed within the French academic tradition. However, his production reveals an evolution towards a more lyrical and sensual language, especially in his scenes of nymphs and bacchantes, where the female figure is integrated into idealized landscapes bathed in a golden and diffuse light. This sensibility, influenced in part by painters such as Claude-Joseph Vernet and Jean-Joseph-Xavier Bidauld, is clearly manifested in the atmospheric treatment and the chromatic delicacy of the portrait.
In the present painting, the lady appears half-length, turning gently towards the viewer with a serene and slightly insinuating expression. The crown of vine leaves and the bunch of grapes she holds refer directly to the Dionysian universe and, by extension, to the myth of Erigone. These attributes not only identify the character, but also introduce a symbolic reading linked to wine, nature and life cycles. The pictorial technique shows a refined workmanship: the soft flesh tones, modeled through subtle transitions of light, contrast with the dark background that highlights the figure and creates an effect of intimacy. The use of glazes and the attention to the nuances of color reveal the quality of the French school of the period, characterized by its balance between academic rigor and decorative grace.
The portrait also reflects a hybridization between genres: it is not only an individual portrait, but also an allegorical scene. This crossover allowed the ladies of high society to project an idealized image of themselves, in keeping with neoclassical tastes and with the renewed interest in antiquity following the boom in archaeological excavations and the spread of classical culture. In this sense, the work is situated in a moment of aesthetic transition, where the elegance of the Ancien Régime coexists with the new sensibilities of the revolutionary and Napoleonic periods.

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