Bernard Picart, Paris 1673 - 1733 Amsterdam
Period
1710Material
oil on canvasSizes
(height) 91.00cm. (width) 147.00cm.Description
The French painter and engraver Bernard Picart (1673-1733) was foremostly famous for his prints. Paintings of his hand are rare. In 1710 the artist moved to Holland, where at first he lives in The Hague and from 1711 on in Amsterdam. Here he continued his career as an illustrator.
The subject of this painting was derived of one of Picart’s own prints. This print was signed: Inventé et gravé par B. Picart, and was one of a series of three that had the elegant joy of rural life as subject. The specific print that was used for this painting was accompanied by a poem:
A l’ombre des bosquets dans un beau jour d’Eté
Cette agréable Campagnie
Goute le doux plaisir que donne l’harmonie
Lorsque tout est bien concerté
Mais parmi les attraits d’une belle musique
Ou de Baptiste Ou de Lambert
L’amour tient sa partie et très souvent se piqué
De faire que deux coeurs soupirent de concert.
The series, of which this ‘Concert Champêtre’ was part, belongs to the so called ‘Fêtes Galantes’, the elegant parties where lavishly dressed men and women enjoy themselves in a landscape. In elegant poses, they make music, read, make poetry and court. The origin of this theme is to be found in the Italian art of the 16th century. Painters like Titian and Giorgione are known to have made similar depictions.
Picart picked this theme up in a contemporary manner of the early eighteenth century. He followed on to the Parisien fashion to go out in the country in the company of elegantly dressed friends, far from the bustle of the city. Picart thus created a new theme, ten years before Antoine Watteau started to paint similar galant companionships that made him famous as the master of the ‘Fêtes Galantes’.
Provenance:
Private collection, the Netherlands
Galerie Jean Lupu, Paris 1990
Private collection, Germany
Literature:
Watteau et la Fête Galante, exhibition catalogue Musée des Beaux Arts Valenciennes, 2004, p. 212, p. 271
Exposition de Tableaux de Maîtres, Galerie Jean Lupu, 1990, pp. 46-47, nr. 21.



