app download
ArtFox APP
Home > Auction >  Asian, European Arts and Antiques, April 22, 2017 >  Lot.347 Antique engraving Duchess of Guise, Paris, France, 1684

LOT 347 Antique engraving Duchess of Guise, Paris, France, 1684

Starting price
USD500
Estimate  USD  1,500 ~ 5,000

Viewed  261  Frequency

Pre-bid 0  Frequency

Log in to view

logo Collect

Eternity Gallery

Asian, European Arts and Antiques, April 22, 2017

Eternity Gallery

Name

Size

Description

Translation provided by Youdao

Translate
Size

Description

Antique French engraving: portrait of Marie of Lorraine, Duchess of Guise, Paris, France, 1684. Engraving after Pierre Mignard (1612 1695). Marie de Lorraine (15 August 1615 3 March 1688) was the daughter of Charles de Lorraine, Duke of Guise and Henriette Catherine de Joyeuse and the last member of the House of Guise, a branch of the House of Lorraine.Size of the engraving: 9.75 x 14 = 24.4 cm x 35 cm. Size of the frame: 22.5 x 17.5 inches = 56 cm x 44 cm. Weight of the framed engraving: 7 lb. = 3.15 kg. Condition: Good, except that there is a small tear (10x22 mm) in the region of the upper part of her dress.Provenance: from private collection of one lady in Florida.BiographyMarie de Lorraine de Guise was a "foreign princess naturalized in France" (that is, the daughter of a foreign prince of the House of Lorraine). After the death of the last male of the House of Guise in 1675, Marie became duchess of Guise, duchess of Joyeuse, and princess of Joinville and enjoyed the vast revenues from these duchies and principalities.[1] People addressed her formally as "Your Highness"; she herself signed legal documents as "Marie de Lorraine"; and after 1675, as "Marie de Lorraine de Guise," but she ended personal letters with, simply, "Guise."Exiled to Florence with her family, 163443,[2] Marie (whom the French knew as "Mademoiselle de Guise") became close to the Medicis and came to love Italy and especially Italian music. For over forty years scarcely a week passed that she did not write to her Medici friends in Florence, or receive word from them through the Tuscan resident in Paris. Circa 1650 she morganatically married Claude de Bourdeille, count of Montrsor [3] by whom she had several children whose existence was never acknowledged publicly.Starting in 1670, Marc-Antoine Charpentier composed for her and sang haute-contre in her service. She protected her loyal servant by soliciting commissions for him from people or establishments who were seeking her continued patronage. For example, she was probably one of the "enraged virgins" and "heroines" who swooped down on Molire in late 1672 and forced him to give Charpentier the chance to write the music for Molire's the forthcoming theatrical spectacle, the Malade Imaginaire. For eighteen years her patronage fostered a number of major works, most of them devotional and strongly influenced by Italian music.[4][5]Successively guardian of her nephew, Louis Joseph, Duke of Guise (d. 1671) and of her grand nephew Francis Joseph, Duke of Guise (d. 1675), as the last member of the senior branch of the House of Guise, she used her vast wealth not only to live splendidly but for projects dear to her heart.[6]After these two closely spaced deaths, Marie turned to devotion. With the help of Father Nicolas Barr, Minim, she founded a teachers' training institute and created schools for girls and hospitals for the poor in her Parisian parish and in her provincial lands. In her vast Parisian residence known as the "Htel de Guise," she presided "magnificently" over a select little "court" composed chiefly of members of the House of Lorraine, clergy, learned protgs, and Italians passing through Paris. Music (often Italian and Italian-style music) was the principal entertainment at these events.Although her relations with Louis Joseph's widow, Lisabeth Marguerite d'Orlans, were often frosty, the two women continued to see one another, both in Paris and at the abbey of Saint Pierre de Montmartre, where Marie's sister Rene was abbess and where Lisabeth's sister, Marguerite Louise d'Orlans, the erstwhile Grand Duchess of Tuscany, resided after 1675.In the early 1670s, Marie had begun to assemble a small ensemble of household musicians to perform the pieces being written by her in-house composer, Marc-Antoine Charpentier.[7] Then, in the early 1680s she enlarged the group, until it rivaled both in size and quality of ensembles maintained by "several sovereigns." Over the years Marie made her composer and her musicians available to her nephew's widow lisabeth, for performances in churches and at the royal court. Both women had private apartments at Montmartre.In a will intended to disinherit her niece,[8] la Grande Mademoiselle (that is, Anne Marie Louise d'Orlans, Duchess of Montpensier [9]) she chose Charles Francois de Stainville as beneficiary in 1688; but on the urging of her heirs, the will was broken by the Parliament of Paris in 1689...[10][11]In 1700, her trustees sold her home in Paris, the Hotel de Guise, was sold to Francois, Prince of Soubise and his wife Anne de Rohan-Chabot and became the Hotel de Soubise.
Low Estimate: 1500;
High Estimate: 5000;
Circa: 1684;
Style: Classicism;

Preview:

Address:

Tampa, FL 33617

Start time:

  • Commission  USD
  • 0 ~ Unlimitation15.0%

Online payment is available,

You will be qualified after paid the deposit!

Online payment is available for this session.

Bidding for buyers is available,

please call us for further information. Our hot line is400-010-3636 !

This session is a live auction,

available for online bidding and reserved bidding

×
This session requires a deposit. Please leave your contact. Our staff will contact you. Or you can call400-010-3636 (Mainland China)+86 010-5994 2750 (Overseas) Contact Art Fox Live Customer Service
Contact:
Other Lots in this session 338unit
Museum quality Etruscan bronze mirror with Poseidon riding
aSeaHorse,circa 400 BC

LOT 1

Phoenician marble sculpture of BA'AL HAMMON & TANIT

LOT 2

Phoenician Goddess Terracotta Head, 400-200BC

LOT 3

Phoenician(?) bronze plate inscriptions & images 1500 BC

LOT 4

Bronze Age, Antique statue: Master of Animals, Luristan, 1000 BC – 700 BC

LOT 5A

Antique museum Luristan bronze spear or dagger or short sword, 1000
BC-600 BC,

LOT 5B

Luristan erotic bronze vessel, circa 800 BC

LOT 5

Ancient Middle East, Islamic(?) bronze thimble in ring shape

LOT 6

The Museum Bronze Age geometrical vessel, Middle East, 4000-1200 BC

LOT 7

Bactrian Greek bronze mirror, 89mm, circa 300-100 BC

LOT 8

Ancient Bactrian bronze mirror 73mm, circa 300-200 BC

LOT 9

Antique Islamic Syrian Enamel copper bowl, 20 x 11cm

LOT 11

Mysterious, genuine, Islamic glazed bowl, 1300-1400 AD

LOT 13

Early Islamic Bronze Peacock Finial, 12th c AD

LOT 14

Islamic Bronze Scale pan, Kufic script, 18-19th c AD

LOT 15

Islamic bronze mirror, Kufic inscriptions, 12-13th c

LOT 16

Art Fox Live
Buyers
Auctioneers
Follow Us
Feedback

在线客服

咨询热线

400-010-3636

微信公众号

APP下载

顶部

Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the session is ended.
Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the current bidding is ended.
Hint
宝物的份数已经被购完,下次下手请及时。
Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the session is ended.
Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the session is ended.
Hint
You will not able to bid now when the bid is started or ended.