Drawing for a frontispiece: "The toast"

Gravelot (1699-1773)


Item type:
drawing
Date of creation:
1735
Height:
21.3 cm  (8 3/8 in.)
Width:
14.3 cm  (5 5/8 in.)
mount: 11 1/4 × 8 5/8 inches (28.6 × 21.9 cm)
Technique / Medium:
pen and black ink, pen and brown ink, and gray wash on medium, modertately textured, beige laid paper mounted on thick, slightly textured, cream wove paper

Description

CURATORIAL COMMENT FROM MUSEUM WEBSITE:
After studying with the history painter Jean Restout and working in the studio of François Boucher in Paris, Gravelot responded to an invitation from the French engraver Claude de Bosc, who was working in London and needed an assistant. Gravelot traveled to England in 1732 or 1733, remaining there until 1745, when anti-French sentiment precipitated his return home. Writing shortly after Gravelot's return to Paris, George Vertue noted that the Frenchman had gained the "reputation" of a most ingenious draughtsman during the time he has been in London." He had in fact played a key role in the introduction of elements of rococo style into England and had significantly advanced the art of British book illustration. During his years in London, Gravelot illustrated over fifty books. This drawing was engraved by Bernard Baron as the frontpiece for William King's The Toast: An Heroick Poem in Four Books, privately published in 1736. One of the targets of King's satirical poems was Frances Brudenell, Countess of Newburgh, the subject of the adoring poem Myra by Goerge Granville, Baron Landsdowne. In Gravelot's illustration Granville shows off a portrait of a beautiful Myra to Apollo, while a satyr delights in the discrepancy between the painted image and the actual appearance of the sitter, to whom he points. Gravelot's composition does not illustrate a particular scene from King's poem but echoes its attack on Granville and Brudenell. Gravelot's elegant draftsmanship in no way vitiates the bite of the satire.
--Scott Wilcox, 2001-05

Iconclass

48C9014
symbolic representations, allegories and emblems ~ satirical poetry; 'Poema satirico' (Ripa)
44C312
political caricatures and satires
92B38(LYRE)
attributes of Apollo: lyre
92L7
centaurs
48CC7353
panpipes - CC - out of doors

Instruments [MIMO Code] (notes)

Panpipe [4024]
Lyre [3501]

RIdIM images


Image URLs

image link 1

Notes

Watermarks: IIK (letters)

Signed and dated in black ink, lower right: "Hubert f. Gravelot inv. and delint. Londini. 1735"

RIdIM record id

6286