Museum | provenance with de Hauke | accnum |
YALE | Holagray collection, Bordeaux, private collection (France?), Cesar de Hauke, Paris;Bibliography;Katherine Neilson and Andrew Carnduff Ritchie, Selected Paintings and Sculpture from the Yale University Art Gallery (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1972), no. 124, ill.;Suzanne L. Stratton, Spanish Polychrome Sculpture 1500–1800 in United States Collections, exh. cat. (New York: The Spanish Institute, 1993), 120–21, no. 21, ill.;James Clifton, The Body of Christ: In the Art of Europe and New Spain, 1150–1800, exh. cat. (Houston: Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 1997), 80–1, no. 34, ill. | 1964.52 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Bequeathed by Hauke, César Mange de;Previous owner/ex-collection Lefuel;Previous owner/ex-collection Schoeller, A | 1968,0210.27 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Bequeathed by Hauke, César Mange de;Previous owner/ex-collection Lefuel;Previous owner/ex-collection Schoeller, A | 1968,0210.27 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Bequeathed by Hauke, César Mange de;Previous owner/ex-collection Corot, Jean Baptiste Camille;Previous owner/ex-collection Rouart, Henri;Previous owner/ex-collection Rouart, Ernest | 1968,0210.21 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Bequeathed by Hauke, César Mange de;Previous owner/ex-collection Corot, Jean Baptiste Camille;Previous owner/ex-collection Rouart, Henri;Previous owner/ex-collection Rouart, Ernest | 1968,0210.21 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Bequeathed by Hauke, César Mange de;Previous owner/ex-collection Berger, Georges;Previous owner/ex-collection Dollfus, Jean | 1968,0210.30 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Bequeathed by Hauke, César Mange de;Previous owner/ex-collection Berger, Georges;Previous owner/ex-collection Dollfus, Jean | 1968,0210.30 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Bequeathed by Hauke, César Mange de;Previous owner/ex-collection Benoit-Champy;Previous owner/ex-collection Hainguerlot;Previous owner/ex-collection Robin, F | 1968,0210.28 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Bequeathed by Hauke, César Mange de;Previous owner/ex-collection Benoit-Champy;Previous owner/ex-collection Hainguerlot;Previous owner/ex-collection Robin, F | 1968,0210.28 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Bequeathed by Hauke, César Mange de;Previous owner/ex-collection Dollfus, Jean;Previous owner/ex-collection Brame, Hector | 1968,0210.29 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Bequeathed by Hauke, César Mange de;Previous owner/ex-collection Dollfus, Jean;Previous owner/ex-collection Brame, Hector | 1968,0210.29 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Bequeathed by Hauke, César Mange de;Previous owner/ex-collection Boisfremont, Charles le Boulanger de;Previous owner/ex-collection Boisfremont, Oscar de;Previous owner/ex-collection Rouart, Henri;Previous owner/ex-collection Chialiva;Previous owner/ex-collection Rouart, Ernest;Previous owner/ex-collection Ampion, T;Previous owner/ex-collection Galerie Hector Brame | 1968,0210.18 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Bequeathed by Hauke, César Mange de;Previous owner/ex-collection Boisfremont, Charles le Boulanger de;Previous owner/ex-collection Boisfremont, Oscar de;Previous owner/ex-collection Rouart, Henri;Previous owner/ex-collection Chialiva;Previous owner/ex-collection Rouart, Ernest;Previous owner/ex-collection Ampion, T;Previous owner/ex-collection Galerie Hector Brame | 1968,0210.18 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Hauke & Co. (New York), after 1936;Lillian Browse, London (1906-2005), by 1943;Lillian Browse Gift 1982 | D.1982.LB.17 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Mme. Mottart {1, 2}. sold Galerie Charpentier, Paris, 8 Feb. 1945 {1, 2}. César de Hauke, 1948. Mr & Mrs Albert D. Lasker, USA. Marlborough Fine Art (dealer), London;bought by the National Gallery from Marlborough Fine Art (dealer), 1977. | NG6438 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Madame Claude Anet {1, 2}. R. Gerard, France, 1936 {1, 2, 3}. Alfred Daber (dealer), Paris {2, 3, 4}. César de Hauke {3, 4};bought by the National Gallery from César de Hauke, 1966. | NG6373 |
UK COLLECTIONS TRUST | Madame Claude Anet {1, 2}. R. Gerard, France, 1936 {1, 2, 3}. Alfred Daber (dealer), Paris {2, 3, 4}. César de Hauke {3, 4};bought by the National Gallery from Major A.E. Allnatt, 1970. | NG6388 |
NORTON SIMON | ?[Léopold Zborowski (1889-1932), Paris].;[Galerie Bing, Paris, by 1925].;[Paul Guillaume (1891-1934), Paris, before 1929].;[De Hauke & Co., New York, by 1929].;[Lucien Demotte, New York, by 1931, sold to];Mr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Reis, New York, by 1935-1965, sold to;[Marlborough-Gerson Gallery, Inc., New York, sold 10 December 1965 to];Mr. and Mrs. Norton Simon, Los Angeles, as part of a divorce settlement, 1970, to;Lucille Simon, Los Angeles, sold 14 August 1975 to;[Paul Rosenberg & Co., New York, stock no. 6478, sold 14 August 1975 to];Norton Simon Art Foundation. | M.1975.13.2.P |
NORTON SIMON | Georges de Bellio, Paris, purchased possibly in 1876 - until 1894, to;Dr. E. and Mrs. Victorine Donop de Monchy (nee de Bellio), 1894-until at least 1897.;M. and Mme Jacques Doucet, Neuilly sur Seine, by 1924, still in 1938;[Hector Brâme, Paris, possibly in partnership with];[Cesar de Hauke, Paris and New York, in partnership with];[Jacques Seligmann, New York, by 1939, sold by 1945].;Walter Bareiss, New York, sold 8 January 1953 to;[Paul Rosenberg & Co., New York, stock no. 5476, sold February 1953 to];Mr. and Mrs. John Barry Ryan, New York, still in 1977;[William Beadleston, Inc., New York, offered 8 December 1978 and subsequently sold 17 January 1979 to];Norton Simon Art Foundation. | M.1979.05.P |
NGA | (Galerie Kahnweiler, Paris, no. 1066);[1] sequestered by the French government during World War I and sold by the government at (second Kahnweiler Collection sale, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 17-18 November 1921, no. 9, as Le Port); purchased by Mr. Clément. Private collection, Zurich, by 1950 until at least 1953. G. David Thompson, Pittsburgh; sold November 1958 to (M. Knoedler & Co., Inc., New York) on joint account with (César de Hauke, New York); purchased 1959 by Henry T. Mudd;[2] Mrs. Henry T. Mudd [later Mrs. Victoria Nebeker Coberly], Pasadena, California; gift 1992 to NGA.[1] A Galerie Kahnweiler label is on the painting's stretcher.[2] Information concerning Knoedler's ownership of the painting provided by Melissa De Medeiros, letter of 14 February 2000 to Sally Mansfield, in NGA curatorial files. The painting was Knoedler stock number A7100, which appears twice on the painting's stretcher, on a paper label and handwritten. | 1992.3.1 |
NGA | (Arnold & Tripp, Paris), 1881; Heber R. Bishop, New York; (sale, New York, American Art Association, 10 January, 1906, no. 13); purchased by (Durand-Ruel, New York); sold 20 February 1906 to (Durand-Ruel, Paris); sold 1908 to M. Rosenberg, Paris;[1] (César de Hauke, New York); Capt. Edward H. Molyneux [1891-1974], Paris, by 1952; sold 1955 to Ailsa Mellon Bruce, New York; gift 1970 to NGA.[1] given in a letter dated 20 December 1977 from Charles Durand-Ruel, citing DR Paris stock number 8101 and DR New York stock number 3075. | 1970.17.27 |
NGA | Théodore Duret [1837-1927], Paris; (his sale, 19 March 1894, no. 12); (Galerie Durand-Ruel, Paris); Antonin Proust, Paris; (M. Knoedler and Co., Paris); (César de Hauke, New York); Andrew W. Mellon, Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C.; gift 1930 to his daughter, Ailsa Mellon Bruce [1901-1969], New York; bequest 1970 to NGA. | 1970.17.26 |
NGA | The private collection of Bernheim-Jeune, Paris, by 1919 until at least 1935.[1] Acquired 1947 by (Wildenstein & Co., London, New York and Paris); sold 1947 to Leigh B. [1905-1987] and Mary Lasker Block [1904-1981], Chicago,[2] until at least 1964.[3] Paul Mellon [1907-1999], Upperville, VA, by 1966;[4] gift 1973 to NGA.[1] Published in Bernheim-Jeune's L'Art Moderne et quelques aspects de l'art d'autrefois in 1919. Lent by Bernheim-Jeune to The Classics of Modern Paintings, De Hauke & Co., New York, 1927. Also published by Bernheim-Jeune in Arsène Alexandre, Paul Gauguin, sa vie et le sens de son oeuvre in 1930, and published in Bernheim-Jeune's 1935 catalogue, Quelques tableaux d'Ingres à Gauguin, no. 7, reproduced.[2] See letter dated 18 June 1999 from Wildenstein & Co., in NGA curatorial files. [3] Published as Block collection in Wildenstein's 1964 catalogue raisonné. It was not included in the 20 May 1981 sale of the Block collection held at Sotheby's, New York.[4] Exhibited with Paul Mellon Collection at the National Gallery of Art in 1966. | 1973.68.2 |
NGA | Possibly Oskar Moll [1875-1947], Breslau.[1] Mrs. Hanke, Berlin.[2] Acquired probably through (Alex Reid & Lefèvre, London) by (Kraushaar Galleries, New York);[3] sold 18 December 1925 to Chester Dale [1883-1962], New York; bequest 1963 to NGA.[1]By 1914 Oskar Moll had the most important collection of Matisse in Germany; this picture however is not included on the list of his collection in Siegfried and Dorothea Salzmann, Oskar Moll Leben und Werk, Munich 1975.[2]Mrs. Hanke according to Chester Dale papers in NGA curatorial records; this information was provided to Dale by Kraushaar in a letter dated 19 February 1927 (see Kraushaar Gallery Records, Archives of American Art, Box 1, Folder 43, Outgoing correspondence). Maud Dale's 1929 book on the Dale collection, Before Manet to Modigliani, gives the name as Hauke.[3] On 7 January 1927 Kraushaar writes to Reid & Lefevre for information on the "small Matisse that I bought from you," and shortly thereafter conveys information about this picture to Chester Dale. (See Kraushaar Gallery Records, Archives of American Art, Box 1, Folder 72, Outgoing Correspondence). Etienne Bignou was probably involved in the sale to Dale, as a photograph of the picture is included in the Bignou albums at the documentation center of the Musée d'Orsay (copy NGA curatorial files). Bignou often acted on Dale's behalf in conjunction with Reid & Lefèvre. | 1963.10.41 |
NGA | By inheritance from the artist [1830-1903] to his wife, Mme Camille [Julie] Pissarro. (Galerie Manzi-Joyant, Paris). (Paul Rosenberg et Cie., Paris). Mme Louise Gillou, Paris, by 1939; her daughter, Mme. René Fenwick, Paris;[1] (her estate sale, Palais Galliera, 3 December 1964, no. 22). (César de Hauke, Geneva); sold 1964 to (M. Knoedler & Co., London and New York); sold 16 February 1965 to Ailsa Mellon Bruce [1901-1969], New York;[2] bequest 1970 to NGA.[1] Published by Venturi in 1939 as from the Gillou collection. Mme Fenwick's name and her relationship to Mme Gillou are according to the M. Knoedler and Co. précis in NGA curatorial files. [2] Dated receipt in NGA curatorial files. | 1970.17.54 |
NGA | (sale, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 18 February 1878, no. 59, as La Haie); purchased by Georges de Bellio [1828-1894];[1] by inheritance to his daughter, Mme Ernest Donop de Monchy [née Victorine de Bellio, 1863-1958] until at least 1937. (Paul Rosenberg et Cie., Paris) and (César de Hauke, Paris), by 1939.[2] Arthur Goldsmith, Paris; sold 1955 to (Walter Feilchenfeldt, Zurich);[3] sold that same year to (Georges Seligmann, Inc., New York); sold 1955 to Paul Mellon [1907-1999], Upperville, Virginia; gift 1985 to NGA.[1] The painting is no. 104 in the inventory of the de Bellio collection, published by Remus Niculescu in Paragone 249 (November 1970): 68.[2] According to Ludovic Rodo Pissarro and Lionello Venturi, Camille Pissarro. Son Art--Son Oeuvre, 2 vols., San Francisco, 1989 (reprint of 1939 edition): no. 135.[3] Goldsmith and Feilchenfeldt per Joachim Pissarro and Claire Durand-Ruel Snollaerts, Pissarro: Critical Catalogue of Paintings, 3 vols., Milan, Paris, and New York, 2005: 2:no. 231. | 1985.64.31 |
NGA | Jules Chavasse, Paris; (his sale, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 22 June 1922, no. 26, repro.). Mrs. A. Bing, New York, by 1928.[1] (Reinhardt Galleries, New York); probably by whom sold to Mrs. Lotus Robb Smith, New York, c. 1927/28 until at least 1931; sold 1937 by an anonymous collector to (Julius H. Weitzner [1896-1986], London and New York);[2] sold 20 October 1950 to Chester Dale [1882-1962], New York; gift 1963 to NGA.[1]Lent by Mrs. Bing to exhibition at Cesar de Hauke's New York gallery in 1928; see Seligmann papers at the Archives of American Art, box 406 (copy NGA curatorial files).[2]See Weitzner receipt dated 20 October 1950 in NGA curatorial files. The anonymous collector who sold Weitzner the painting is almost certainly Mr. Smith, whom Lotus Robb divorced c. 1937. She later married Mr. Marvin Ross, who detailed how she returned the paintings to her former husband when they divorced, and he immediately sold them; see note by David Rust dated January 1965 in NGA curatorial files. | 1963.10.56 |
NGA | Jules Chavasse, Paris; (his sale, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 22 June 1922, no. 25, repro.). (Reinhardt Galleries, New York); probably by whom sold by 1928 to Mrs. Lotus Robb Smith, New York, until at least 1931;[1] Sold 1937 by an anonymous collector to (Julius H. Weitzner [1896-1986], London and New York);[2] sold 20 October 1950 to Chester Dale [1882-1962], New York; gift 1963 to NGA.[1]Exhibited at De Hauke and Co., New York, in 1928, on loan from Mrs. Lotus Robb Smith, possibly through Reinhardt gallery. See de Hauke records in Seligmann papers at Archives of American Art, boxes 386 and 406 (copies NGA curatorial files). Published in Robb's collection in Parnassus, March 1931.[2]See Weitzner receipt dated 20 October 1950 in NGA curatorial files. The anonymous collector who sold Weitzner the painting is almost certainly Mr. Smith, whom Lotus Robb divorced c. 1937. She later married Mr. Marvin Ross, who detailed how she returned the paintings to her former husband when they divorced, and he immediately sold them; see note by David Rust dated January 1965 in NGA curatorial files. | 1963.10.57 |
NELSON ATKINS | With César Mange de Hauke, Paris, by December;18, 1949;Purchased;from Hauke by The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO, 1949. | 49-71 |
NELSON ATKINS | With César Mange de Hauke, Paris, by December 18, 1949;Purchased;from Hauke by The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO, 1949. | 49-72 |
NELSON ATKINS | With the;artist, Paris, until 1919;Degas’s posthumous sale, Tableaux, Pastels;et Dessins par Edgar Degas et provenant de son atelier, Galerie Georges;Petit, Paris, July 2, 1919, no. 69a, as Fillette assise (étude de nu);Rouart, Paris [1];With C. D. H. Incorporated (César Mange de Hauke, d. 1965, New York and Paris);New York, by December 18, 1949;Purchased from the latter by The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO;1949.;NOTES;[1] This constituent comes from Jean Sutherland Boggs, Drawings by Degas, exh. cat. (St. Louis: City Art Museum of St.;Louis, 1966), 28, and Götz Adriani, Edgar;Degas: Pastelle, Ölskizzen, Zeichnungen, exh. cat. (Cologne: DuMont, 1984), 340. It is not clear which Rouart is referred;to, but it could not be Henri Rouart (1833- 1912), or his brother, Alexis;Rouart, (1839-1911) since they had both passed away by the date of Degas’ sale;in 1919. | 49-73 |
NELSON ATKINS | The artist, until 1875;His posthumous sale, La Vente qui aura lieu par suite du décès de;Jean-François Millet, peintre, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, May 10-11, 1875, lot;255, as Ferme de Grimesnil, à;Equeurdreville;With De Hauke and Co., New York, by December 18, 1949;Purchased;from de Hauke, through Harold Woodbury Parsons, by The Nelson-Atkins Museum of;Art, Kansas City, MO, 1949. | 49-74 |
MOMA | Michel Manzi, Paris (Galerie Manzi-Joyant, Paris). Until March 1919Auction, Collection Manzi, Galerie Manzi, Joyant, & Cie, Paris, March 14, 1919Roger G. Gompel, ParisCésar M. de Hauke, New YorkJacques Seligmann & Co., New York (Germain Seligman). [Purchased from de Hauke], by 1946Dr. and Mrs. David M. Levy, New York. [By January 1953] – 1957 | 1.411.957 |
MOMA | 1912, Georges Braque, Paris.Summer 1912 - December 12, 1914, Galerie Kahnweiler (photo no. 1054?), Paris, purchased from the artist.December 12, 1914 - November 17, 1921, Kahnweiler collection and gallery stock, sequestered during World War I by the French government as enemy property and sold through Hôtel Drouot (2nd sale of Kahnweiler collection, November 17-18, 1921, lot 16), Paris.November 17, 1921 - ?, André Breton, Paris, purchased from the French government at the 2nd Kahnweiler auction.? - March 1930, Galerie Pierre, Paris.March 1930, De Hauke & Co., New York (stock no. 3414), purchased from Galerie Pierre.March 1930 - December 12, 1941, Paul and Mildred Lamb, Cleveland, Ohio, purchased from De Hauke & Co. and sold at auction, Modern paintings, Sculptures, Drawings and Prints, Parke-Bernet Galleries, New York, December 12, 1941, lot 120.December 12, 1941, The Museum of Modern Art, purchased from Mildred Lamb at auction. | 8.1942 |
MOMA | Amedeo Modigliani, Paris.By 1926 - 1928, Jonas Netter, Brussels and Paris, probably acquired from the artist.1928 - 1932, Alex Reid & Lefevre, London (no. 156/28) and Modern Paintings, Inc. (formerly De Hauke & Co., Inc., no. M-3280), New York, jointly purchased from Jonas Netter through Etienne Bignou, Paris (no. 1074) and Mr. [M. Florent] Willems.1932/1934 - 1946, Jacques Seligmann & Co., Inc., New York and Paris (no. M-3280), acquired/assumed from Alex Reid & Lefevre and Modern Paintings, Inc.1946 - November 22, 1949, Josef von Sternberg, Weekhawken, New Jersey, and Hollywood, California, acquired from Germain Seligman (Jacques Seligmann & Co.) through Pierre F. Nesi, Beverly Hills, and sold at the auction sale of the Josef von Sternberg collection, Parke-Bernet Galleries, New York, November 22, 1949, lot 92.1949, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, purchased at the auction sale of the Josef von Sternberg collection. | 13.195 |
MOMA | Ernestine Seurat (the artist"s mother), Paris, 1891 [1]; by inheritance to Léon Appert (the artist"s brother in law), Paris, 1899 [2]; by inheritance to his son Maurice Appert, Paris, 1925 [3]; to Etienne Bignou, Paris [4]; to Alexandre Reid & Lefevre, Ltd., London, 1926 [5]; owned jointly by Reid & Lefevre, Ltd./Knoedler & Co., New York, December 1926 [6]; sold by Knoedler & Co., New York to Lillie P. Bliss, New York, 1927 [7]; acquired by The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1934 (The Lillie P. Bliss Collection).[1] C. M. de Hauke, Seurat et son oeuvre, Paris: Gründ, 1961, no. 192. See Salon des Indépendants, Paris, 1892 (no. 1100): "Port-en-Bessin, L"avant-port, marée haute [title erroneous]; prêté par Mme Seurat;" and Les XX, Brussels, 1892 (no. 12): "Port-en-Bessin; L"avant-port, marée haute [title erroneous], appartient à Mme Seurat."[2] C. M. de Hauke, Seurat et son oeuvre, Paris: Gründ, 1961, no. 192. Henri Dorra and John Rewald, eds. Seurat, Paris: Les Beaux Arts, 1959, no. 186: "Appert, Paris." [3] The Lillie P. Bliss Collection | 1.261.934 |
MOMA | Estate of the artist (Madeleine Knobloch), Paris, 1891 [1]; acquired by Gustave Kahn (1859-1936), Paris, 1892 [2]. Victor Claessens, Waereghem, near Brussels, before 1923 [3]; by inheritance to his son Armand Claessens, Waereghem, near Brussels, 1929 [4]; sold to Wildenstein Galleries, New York, 1937 [5]; sold to Adele R. and David M. Levy, November 1938 [6]; The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1957 (Gift of Mrs. David M. Levy).[1] C. M. de Hauke, Seurat et son oeuvre, Paris: Gründ, 1961, no. 167.[2] Ibid. Henri Dorra and John Rewald, eds. Seurat, Paris: Les Beaux Arts, 1959, no. 171: "Gustave Kahn, Bruxelles (à partir de 1892)." Included in the exhibition Les XX, Brussels, 1892 (no. 8): "Embouchure de la Seine (Honfleur), Soir, appartient à M. G. Kahn." [3] C. M. de Hauke, Seurat et son oeuvre | 2.661.957 |
MOMA | Jacques Seligmann Galleries, New York (Cesar M. de Hauke). 1931Stephen C. Clark, New York. Purchased from Seligmann, 1931The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Given anonymously, 1941 | 3.921.941 |
MOMA | The artistGalerie Bernheim-Jeune, Paris. Purchased from Matisse, May 25-26, 1915Léonce Rosenberg, Paris. Purchased from Bernheim-Jeune, May 26, 1915 –Jacques Doucet, Paris. Purchased through Paul Guillaume, advised by André Breton, end 1923 - 1929Mrs. Jacques Doucet, Paris. 1929 - 1939Cesar M. de Hauke, New York. Purchased from Madame Doucet, 1939 – 1947Pierre Matisse Gallery, New York. 1948Mr. and Mrs. Samuel A. Marx, Chicago; then Florene May Schoenborn (Samuel A. Marx"s widow, later Mrs. Wolfgang Schoenborn). Purchased from Pierre Matisse, November 15, 1948 - 1964The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift and bequest of Florene M. Schoenborn and Samuel A. Marx, 1964 | 5.071.964 |
MOMA | Estate of the artist (Madeleine Knobloch), Paris, 1881 [1]; sold to Veuve (Sylvie) Monnom (1836-1921), Brussels, 1892 [2]; to Marie (née Monnom) (1866-1959) and Théo (1862-1926) van Rijsselberghe, Brussels, by 1904 until at least 1909 [3]. [Galerie Druet, Paris, 1913] [4]; [Félix Fénéon, Paris] [5]; [Galerie Alfred Flechtheim, Düsseldorf] [6]. Sold through Gösta A. Olson, Stockholm to Rolf de Maré, Stockholm/Paris, 1918 (in de Maré"s possession until at least 1936) [7]; sold to Paul Rosenberg, Paris [8]; confiscated during the Nazi occupation by the ERR (Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg), 1941 [9]; traded by Hermann Goering"s agent Andreas Hofer to Hans Wendland and Theodor Fischer, Lucerne, in exchange for objects acquired for the Goering collection, April 1942 [10]; turned over by Fischer at the request of the Swiss government to the collecting point at the Kunstmuseum Bern, 1945 [11]; returned to Paul Rosenberg, New York, June 1948 [12]; sold to William A. M. Burden, New York, October 1948 [13]; acquired by The Museum of Modern Art, New York (Gift of Mr. and Mrs. William A. M. Burden), 1963.[1] Included in the 7th Salon des Artistes Indépendants, Pavillon de la Ville de Paris, March 20-April 27, 1891 no. 1106 (see de Hauke 1961, Seurat et son oeuvre, Paris: Gründ, 1961, p. 227).[2] Henri Dorra and John Rewald, eds., Seurat: L’Oeuvre peint, biographie et catalogue critique, Paris: Les Beaux-Arts, 1959, no. 203: "Monnom, Bruxelles (acquis pour 400 francs en 1892)." Included in the 8th Salon des Artistes Indépendants, Pavillon de la Ville de Paris, March 19-April 27, 1892, no. 1107: "Prêté par M. Monnom." (see de Hauke 1961, p. 228). | 7.851.963 |
MFA | Until 1887, Léon Meinard, Paris, January 28, 1887, Meinard sale, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, lot 5, to Alfred Robaut (b. 1830 - d. 1909), Paris, for 350 fr [see note 1]. 1889, Paul-Arthur Chéramy, Paris [see note 2]. Philippe de Saint-Albin, Paris. By 1928 until at least 1936 (and probably through 1942 or later), Albert S. Henraux (b. 1881 - d. 1953), Paris [see note 3]. February 29, 1956, sold by Hector Brame and Cesar de Hauke (dealers), Paris, to M. Knoedler and Co., New York (stock no. A6296), May 7, 1956, sold by Knoedler to William Appleton Coolidge (b. 1901 - d. 1992), Topsfield and Cambridge, MA, 1993, bequest of William A. Coolidge to the MFA. (Accession Date: January 27, 1993);NOTES;[1] According to Alfred Robaut, L'Oeuvre de Corot: Catalogue Raisonné et Illustré (Paris, 1905), cat. no. 380. [2] He lent it to the Exposition Centennale de l'Art Français (Paris, 1889), cat. no. 158 bis (as "Femme a la Serpe"). [3] He lent the painting to the "Exposition d'Oeuvres de Camille J. B. Corot, Figures et Paysages d'Italie," Paul Rosenberg, Paris, June 6 - July 7, 1928, cat. no. 18 and "Corot," Musée de L'Orangerie, Paris, 1936, cat. no. 33. Germain Bazin published the painting as being in the Henraux collection in 1942, see his "Corot" (1942), p. 116, cat. no. 51. | 1993.36 |
MFA | 1925, Etienne Bignou (dealer, b. 1891 - d. 1950), Paris. William Alexander Cargill (d. 1962), Glasgow [see note 1]. November 12, 1928, sold by De Hauke and Co., Inc., New York, to John Taylor Spaulding (b. 1870 - d. 1948), Boston, 1948, bequest of John Taylor Spaulding to the MFA. (Accession Date: June 3, 1948);NOTES;[1] According to De Hauke and Co. the pastel came "from the collection of M. Etienne Bignou, Paris, 1925" and "from the collection of William A. C., Esq., Glasgow." This is almost certainly the collector William Cargill. | 48.591 |
MFA | April 16, 1883, deposited by the artist with Durand-Ruel, Paris, November 12, 1884, returned to the artist, February 19, 1886, deposited by the artist with Durand-Ruel and shipped to New York, November 22, 1886, sold by the artist to Durand-Ruel and sold the same day to Mme. Hiltbrunner, June 15, 1889, deposited by Mme. Hiltbrunner with Durand-Ruel, August 25, 1891, sold by Mme. Hiltbrunner to Durand-Ruel and, in September, 1891, transferred back to Paris [see note 1], January 2, 1894, sold by Durand-Ruel, Paris to Félix-François Depeaux (b. 1853 - d. 1920), Rouen, May 31 - June 1, 1906, Depeaux sale, Galerie Georges Petit, Paris, lot 38, to Depeaux's brother-in-law, Edmond Décap, Paris, by descent to Maurice Barret-Décap, Biarritz, France, 1937, sold by Barret-Décap, possibly through Anthony H. Manley, Paris [see note 2] to the dealers Paul Brame (b. 1898 - d. 1971) and César de Hauke (b. 1900), Paris, for Jacques Seligmann et Fils, Paris [see note 3], March 19, 1937, transferred from Seligmann, Paris, to Jacques Seligmann and Co., New York, April, 1937, sold by Seligmann, New York, to the MFA for $150,000. (Accession Date: May 5, 1937);NOTES;[1] The early provenance and information about Durand-Ruel's transactions is taken from Colin B. Bailey, Renoir, Impressionism, and Full-Length Painting (exh. cat. Frick Collection, New York, 2012), p. 212.;[2] Maurice Barret-Décap owned the painting until at least February 9, 1937, as his correspondence with Seligmann attests. The provenance provided by Seligmann at the time of the painting's acquisition lists the name of Anthony Manley after that of Barret-Décap. The gallery's shipping papers from March 19, 1937, note that it was purchased from Manley on February 13 (year illegible, presumably 1937), Manley also wrote to Seligmann on April 3, 1937, regarding the payment of interest on the painting. It is possible that Barret-Décap sold the work to Seligmann through Manley, that the two men owned it jointly, or that Manley owned the work for a very short period of time, around February 9-13, 1937.;[3] De Hauke was a sales representative for Jacques Seligmann and Co. While he purchased works of art that were sold by the gallery, the ownership of the objects was often officially shared by several art dealers, and the transactions became quite complicated. De Hauke and Brame worked together on several occasions. | 37.375 |
MET | Frédéric (Frédé) Gérard, Paris (1905–12, acquired from the artist in 1905, sold in 1912), Alfred Flechtheim, Düsseldorf (1912–14, sold in August 1914 for 7,000 marks, through Nils Dardel, to de Maré), Rolf de Maré, Hildesborg, Sweden, and Paris (1914–52, sold on June 10, 1952, for $40,000, to de Hauke and Brame), [César Mange de Hauke, New York and Hector Brame, Paris, 1952, sold on August 5, 1952 to Knoedler], [Knoedler and Co., New York, 1952, sold in September 1952, reportedly for $60,000, to Payson], Joan Whitney (Mrs Charles Shipman) Payson, Manhasset, New York (1952–d. 1975), her daughter, Mrs. Vincent (Lorinda) de Roulet, Manhasset (1975–89, sale, Sotheby's, New York, November 15, 1989, no. 31, sold to Annenberg), Walter H. and Leonore Annenberg, Rancho Mirage, California (1989–92, owned jointly with MMA, 1992–his d. 2002, his bequest to MMA) | 1.992.391 |
MET | René Petit-Le Roy, Paris (until 1903, sale, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, May 30, 1903, no. 23, as "Paysage avec rochers et constructions," together with no. 22 for Fr 1,205 to Lavillé), Monsieur Lavillé,?comte de Saint-Léon, château de Jeurre (until 1937),?[Nat Leeb, Paris, 1937–49, sold to Ujlaky],?[Alexandre Ujlaky, Paris, from 1949], [Paul Brame and César de Hauke, Paris, 1952–54, sold to Chrysler], Walter P. Chrysler Jr., New York (1954–d. 1988, on loan to The Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, from 1971, his estate sale, Sotheby's, New York, June 1, 1989, no. 110, sold to MMA) | 1.989.183 |
MET | Edmond-François Aman-Jean (French)1883 - June 1930, De Hauke & Co., New York (American), for Jacques Seligmann & Co.,June 1930 - February 1931 [stock no. 1539], Stephen C. Clark (American), February 1931 - 1960, Donor: Stephen C. Clark (American)New York, February 1931-1960 1931-1960 | 61.101.16 |
MET | Mme Ernestine Seurat (French)until at least 1892 and probably until 1899, Emile Seurat (French)the artist's brother, until his death in 1906, Mme veuve Emile Seurat (French)from 1906, Félix Fénéon (French)by 1926, until 1929, De Hauke & Co., New York (American), for Jacques Seligmann & Co., Jan - Oct 1929[stock no. 1329], Lizzie Plummer Bliss (American), Oct. 1929 until her death in 1931, Bliss Bequest to the Museum of Modern Art, New York, until purchase by MMA in 1951 | 55.21.1 |
MET | Inherited from artist by his brother Emile Seurat (French)from 1891 until no later than 1906, Félix Fénéon (French)by 1926, until January 1928, De Hauke & Co., New York (American), for Jacques Seligmann & Co., Jan - March 1928[stock no. 1141], William Macbeth Inc., New York, from March 1928 until 1929, Lizzie Plummer Bliss (American), by 1929 until her death in 1931, Bliss Bequest in 1934 to Museum of Modern Art, New York 1934 until purchase by MMA, 1951 | 55.21.4 |
MET | César de Hauke Paris, Knoedler and Co. (French, British, American)New York, Donor: Walter C. Baker (American)New York | 1.972.118.203 |
MET | Liebermann, Riezler, César de Hauke, according to K. E. Maison, Walter Feilchenfeldt, according to K. E. Maison, Henri Baderou (French), according to K. E. Maison, Grégoire Tarnopol | 1980.21.10 |
MET | Comte de Turpin de Crissé, Jacques Mathey, Gilbert Lévy, Matthiesen Gallery, Louise de Lesparda, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, Offered by Cailleux (French)in 1930 to Dr. Oskar Reinhart, Oskar Reinhart, César de Hauke && Co.;Donor: Walter C. Baker (American) | 1.972.118.218 |
MET | Félix Fénéon (French), Pierre Bonnard (French), by 1926 until his death in 1947and subsequently owned by his estate, 1947-1954 (Bonnard Sale, Galerie Charpentier, 23 February 1954, no. 9), César de Hauke, Walter C. Baker (American), by 1958, until 1971, Donor: Walter C. Baker (American) | 1.972.118.235 |
MET | Edgar Degas (French)(Atelier sale 1918, no. 316), César de Hauke(given to him by a private collector, London), Vendor: Eugene Victor Thaw | 19.821.025 |
MET | Gustave Pellet (French)until 1919, Previously owned, by descent, Maurice Exteens(to at least 1937), César de Hauke, Le Vésinet (Private Collection), Private collection, France, Hector Brame(from whom MMA purchased) | 68.670 |
MET | ?By descent to the sitter's son, Fiorillo del Florido-Henri-Edmond Fournier, Paris, until his death, 1895,?bequeathed to Baron Joseph Raphaël Vitta, Paris, by the former, César de Hauke, Paris, John S. Thacher, Washington, D.C., ca. 1952, Private Collection (Paris), E.V. Thaw & Co., Inc., New York, until 1998, sold to Wrightsman, Mrs. Charles Wrightsman, New York, from 1998, Donor: Jayne Wrightsman | 2012.150.12 |
MET | [Ambroise Vollard, Paris, until 1897, by exchange with three other Cézannes for cash and "un tableau de Lautrec de chez Boussod (femme à la toilette)," on January 25, to Loeser], Charles A. Loeser, Florence (1897–d. 1928), his wife, Olga Lebert Loeser, Florence (1928–d. 1947), their daughter, Matilda Loeser Calnan, Florence and Lausanne (1947–?1961), [?Bruscoli, Florence, from 1961], M. Guidi, Lausanne (until 1963, sold in September for $105,000 to Knoedler and de Hauke), [Knoedler, New York, and De Hauke and Co., New York, 1963, Knoedler stock no. A8539, sold for $77,150 to C. D. H. Inc., Paris], [Hector Brame, Paris, 1963, sold in November to Payson], Joan Whitney Payson, New York and Manhasset (1963–d. 1975) | 1976.201.12 |
MET | Baronne de Ruble, Paris, Madame la Baronne de Ruble, Paris, 1889, René Gimpel, Paris(?), Alfred Beurdeley, Paris (Lugt 421 in the lower left and right corners on the recto), Beurdeley sale, Galerie Georges Petit, Paris, 13-15 March 1905, lot 80, color ill., Walter Gay, Paris (d. 1938), [Galeirie André Weil, Paris], in Germany during World War II, César de Hauke, Paris. Acquired by Robert Lehman from De Hauke in March 1953. | 1975.1.628 |
MET | [Galerie Neue Kunst Hans Goltz, Munich], [César de Hauke, Paris], [Galerie Europe, Paris, until 1970], Heinz Berggruen, Paris and Berlin (1970–84, his gift to MMA) | 1984.208.4 |
MET | [possibly William Uhde, Paris, until ca. 1906, sold to Suermondt], Edwin Suermondt, Aachen (by 1906–1912 or 1913), [Der Neue Kunstsalon (Max Dietzel), Munich, by 1913, consigned in 1913 and sold by 1916 to Thannhauser], [Heinrich Thannhauser, Munich, by 1916–at least 1918, and probably until 1922, stock no. 5041, sold to Rosenberg], [Paul Rosenberg, 1922, sold in May 1922 for Fr 18,000 ($1,700) to Quinn], John Quinn, New York (1922–d. 1924), his sister, Julia Quinn Anderson, New York (1924–30 or slightly later), her daughter, Mary Anderson, New York (until 1936, sold in May 1936, together with Seurat's "Les Poseuses," through Mrs. Cornelius J. Sullivan, to McIlhenny), Henry P. McIlhenny, Philadelphia (1936, in November 1936 to Wintersteen), his sister, Mrs. John (Bernice) Wintersteen, Villanova, Pennsylvania (1936, sold in December 1936, through Cesar M. de Hauke of Jacques Seligmann & Co., to Clifford), Mr. and Mrs. Henry Clifford, Radnor, Pennsylvania (1936–60, sold in July 1960, through M. Knoedler & Co., to MMA) | 60.87 |
KIMBALL | (Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler [25 June 1884-11 January 1979], Paris).;Rolf de Maré [1888-1964], Paris and Stockholm, by 1923 until 1947;(César Mange de Hauke, Paris and New York) [8 March 1900-1965] by 1947.;Mrs. Edith K. Bralove, Washington D. C., by 1959 until 1972;(sale, Sotheby Parke-Bernet, New York, 25 October 1972, no. 66);purchased for $270,000 by George P. Livanos [1925/26-1997], St. Moritz and London;(Acquavella Galleries, Inc., New York);purchased by Kimbell Art Foundation, Fort Worth 1989. | AP 1989.02 |
HARVARD | Unidentified owner, Paris, sold, [through Hôtel Drouot, Paris, June 16, 1906, no 30.]. Dr. Alfred Wolff, Munich, (1912). Sir Michael Sadler, England, (1912). [De Hauke & Co., New York], sold, to A. Conger Goodyear, New York, (1929-1937) sold, [through Wildenstein && Co., New York];to Maurice Wertheim, New York (1937-1951) bequest, to Fogg Art Museum, 1951. | 1951.49 |
HARVARD | Madame Abel Desjardin, Paris. [Cesar de Hauke], sold [through Knoedler && Co., New York];to Maurice Wertheim, 1947, bequest, to Fogg Art Museum, 1951 | 1951.77 |
HARVARD | Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas, 1878, sold, to Camille Groult, Paris (1879), by descent, to the Groult family (1947), sold, [through César M. de Hauke] to Dr. Fritz Heer, Zurich, sold, [through Thannhauser Gallery and César M. de Hauke, New York, 1948] to Maurice Wertheim (1949-1951), bequest, to Fogg Art Museum, 1951. | 1951.68 |
HARVARD | Emile Seurat. Félix Fénéon. [Buchholz Gallery, Curt Valentin, New York, NY]. [Cesar de Hauke of Jacques Seligmann & Co., New York, NY (by 1943-1948), sold], to Lois Orswell, Pomfret Center, CT (1948-1993), gift, to Harvard University Art Museum, 1993.;Notes;1. In “George Seurat” (Editions Albin Michel, Paris, 1948), John Rewald lists the drawing as belonging to the Curt Valentin Collection, New York. A label, formerly on the back of the drawing’s frame from the Buchholz Gallery seems to confirm this provenance.;2. The drawing is listed in the 1942-1943 stock catalogs of Jacques Seligmann & Co., New York, indicating that it was with this dealer by that time.;3. Lois Orswell placed the drawing on deposit at the Fogg Art Museum from 1953 to 1955 (see Orswell catalogue pp. 372, 374). Orswell placed the work on long-term loan to the museum from 1969 to 1993. | 1.993.231 |
HARVARD | Atelier Degas (Lugt 657), sold [through Vente III (Lugt 658), Galerie Georges Petit, Paris, April 7-8, 1919, no. 158.1], to [Henri Fiquet, Paris]. [César Mange de Hauke, New York], gift, to Fogg Art Museum, 1930 | 1930.17 |
HARVARD | Atelier Degas, [sold at Vente III, no. 344b, 1919]. [César M. de Hauke], sold to Paul J. Sachs, 1930, bequest, to Fogg Art Museum, 1965. | 1.965.256 |
HARVARD | Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas, sold, [though Atelier Degas at Vente I, no. 328, 1918]. [César M. de Hauke], sold, to Paul J. Sachs, Cambridge, 1929, bequest, to Fogg Art Museum, 1965. | 1.965.263 |
HARVARD | Atelier Degas, [sold at Vente III, no. 344a, 1919]. [César M. de Hauke], sold to Paul J. Sachs, 1930, bequest, to Fogg Art Museum, 1965. | 1.965.255 |
HARVARD | Artist's studio, his posthumous sale, Paris, 17-24 February 1864, A. Robaut, J. F. Gigoux, his sale, Paris, 1882, Théodore Duret, César M. de Hauke, sold, to Meta and Paul J. Sachs, bequest, to Fogg Art Museum, 1949, inv. no. 1949.6 | 1949.6 |
HARVARD | Alfred Sensier, Paris. Possibly Mme. Duhamel. [Cesar de Hauke of Jacques Seligmann & Co., New York, sold, October, 1938], to Paul Sachs, Cambridge, MA, gift, to Fogg Art Museum, 1963.;Notes;1. Mme. Duhamel is listed under previous collections on the object's accession documentation. | 1.963.144 |
HARVARD | Rouland. Bernheim-Jeune, Paris. Vicomte Bernard d’Hendecourt, Paris, sold, [through Sotheby’s, London, May 9, 1929, lot 165]. Paul Rosenberg, Paris and New York. Paul J. Sachs, Cambridge, MA (by 1936-1937), sold, [through Jacques Seligmann & Co., New York, November 1937], to Henry P. McIlhenny, Philadelphia PA (1937-1957), gift, to Fogg Art Museum, 1957.;Notes;1. The drawing was listed in the 1936 “Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University, Handbook” (third edition, p. 160) as being in the Paul J. Sachs collection.;2. The drawing is listed as number 6462 in the Jacques Seligmann & Co. stock catalogue from 1937-1938 (Jacques Seligmann & Co. archives, Archives of American Art online). The entry is crossed out, possibly indicating that the drawing was sold during this time (see note 3).;3. In a night letter dated November 9, 1937 C.M. de Hauke of Jacques Seligmann & Co. notifies Paul J. Sachs that he sold the “Cezanne watercolor” to Henry McIlhenny. This almost certainly refers to the drawing in question, as Sachs expressed interest in selling the work in correspondence with Seligmann & Co. predating this letter (Jacques Seligmann & Co. archives, Archives of American Art online). In addition, in a memo dated July 17, 1988, Agnes Mongan of the Fogg Art Museum recalls that Paul Sachs had been eager to sell the watercolor. She specifies that the offer to McIlhenny was made with the understanding that he would bequeath the work to the Fogg upon his death. | 1.957.204 |
HARVARD | Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas, 1878, sold, to Camille Groult, Paris (1879), by descent, to the Groult family (1947), sold, [through César M. de Hauke] to Dr. Fritz Heer, Zurich, sold, [through Thannhauser Gallery and César M. de Hauke, New York, 1948] to Maurice Wertheim (1949-1951), bequest, to Fogg Art Museum, 1951. | 1951.68 |
HARVARD | Maurice Exteens, 1958. [Paul Brame and César de Hauke, Paris]. Sir Robert Henry Edward Abdy, London, by descent, to Sir Valentine Robert Duff Abdy, Paris. [La Galerie de L’oeil, Paris]. [E.V. Thaw & Co., New York]. [R. M. Light and Co., Boston, 1968]. Philip and Frances Hofer, Boston, Frances Hofer bequest, to Fogg Art Museum, 1978. | M19786 |
HARVARD | Madame Abel Desjardin, Paris. [Cesar de Hauke], sold [through Knoedler && Co., New York];to Maurice Wertheim, 1947, bequest, to Fogg Art Museum, 1951 | 1951.77 |
AIC | Commissioned by H. Lefuel for the south facade of the Pavillon de Flore, Tuileries Palace, Paris, 1863; models completed 1865 and in Carpeaux's studio until 1913; sold, the artist's atelier sale, Galerie Manzi-Joyant, 15 rue de la Ville-l'Éveque, Paris, December 8-9, 1913, lot 106, to Nelson for 2000 francs [according to Gazette de l'Hotel Drouot]. Consigned to Gallery Hector Brame, Paris, September 1955 [according to letter from Sylvie Brame to Brandon Ruud, November 24, 2004, copy in curatorial file; see also 1955-56 Paris exh. cat.]; sold by Hector Brame and César de Hauke to the Art Institute, 1957. | 1.957.247 |
AIC | Commissioned by H. Lefuel for the south facade of the Pavillon de Flore, Tuileries Palace, Paris, 1863; models completed 1865 and in Carpeaux’s studio until 1913; sold, the artist’s atelier sale, Galerie Manzi-Joyant, 15 rue de la Ville-l’Évêque, Paris, December 8–9, 1913, lot 106, to Nelson for 2000 francs [according to Gazette de l’Hôtel Drouot]. Consigned to Gallery Hector Brame, Paris, September 1955 [according to letter from Sylvie Brame to Brandon Ruud, November 24, 2004, copy in curatorial file; see also 1955-56 Paris exh. cat.]; sold by Hector Brame and César de Hauke to the Art Institute, 1957. | 1.957.246 |
AIC | Commissioned by H. Lefuel for the south facade of the Pavillon de Flore, Tuileries Palace, Paris, 1863; models completed 1865 and in Carpeaux's studio until 1913; sold, the artist's atelier sale, Galerie Manzi-Joyant, 15 rue de la Ville-l'Éveque, Paris, December 8-9, 1913, lot 106, to Nelson for 2000 francs [according to Gazette de l'Hotel Drouot]. Consigned to Gallery Hector Brame, Paris, September 1955 [according to letter from Sylvie Brame to Brandon Ruud, November 24, 2004, copy in curatorial file; see also 1955-56 Paris exh. cat.]; sold by Hector Brame and César de Hauke to the Art Institute, 1957. | 1.957.245 |
AIC | Elizabeth Ruth Edwards (c. 1833-1907), Fantin-Latour’s art agent, London. Gustave Tempelaere (died 1904), Paris in 1901 [Tempelaere inventory no. 4679; see letter from Sylvie Brame to Gloria Groom, dated April 10, 2002, in curatorial file]. Antonio Mancini (died 1930), Rome by 1906 until at least 1924 [acc. to Bénédite1906 and Gibson 1924]. Possibly E. Lernoud, Paris [acc. to Ottawa 1983; mentioned in Paris 1955 as the owner preceding Mancini, but this cannot be confirmed]. Mme. Vincent Daniel, Rennes by 1936 [acc. to letter from Philippe Brame to Gloria Groom, dated April 30, 2001, in curatorial file; in Grenoble 1936 she is incorrectly listed as Madame Vincent Danielo, Vannes; in Ottawa 1983, she is incorrectly located in Vennes]; sold to Hector Brame, Paris in 1951 [acc. to letter from Philippe Brame citied above]; Hector Brame and César de Hauke, Paris; sold to the Art Institute in September 1951. | 1.951.226 |
AIC | Sold by the artist to Théo van Gogh for 300 Francs probably in the first half of 1889 [according to "carnet de l'artiste," 1888-1889, see Huyghe 1952, p. 223]; Émile Schuffenecker [according to Jeanne Schuffenecker, see Wildenstein 2001]; Thannhauser Galerie, Lucerne, c. 1923, stock no. 1167 [according to Wildenstein 2001]. James W. Barney, New York, c. 1929 [according to New York 1929 exh. cat.]. De Hauke and Co., New York, 1930 [according to Providence, R. I. 1930 exh. cat.]. Jacques Seligmann and Co., New York by 1931 [according to St. Louis 1931 exh. cat.; De Hauke and Seligmann may have owned the picture together since they were partners until about 1931]; sold to the Art Institute, October 26, 1934, using funds from the Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Larned Coburn Fund. | 1.934.391 |
AIC | Georges Pierre Seurat (died 1891), Paris [panneau no. 87, posthumous inventory, dated 3 May 1891, see de Hauke 1961]; possibly given by the artist’s mother, Ernestine Faivre Seurat, to Maximilien Luce [according to Herbert, 1992]; Maximilien Luce (died 1941), Paris; by descent to his son, Frédéric Luce, in 1941; sold to Wildenstein and Co., Paris and New York, May 1955 (arrived in New York, October 1955); sold to Mr. and Mrs. Leigh B. Block, Chicago, November 1955 [according to Wildenstein’s letter to Susan Stein, 12 February 1991]; bequeathed to the Art Institute, 1981. | 1981.15 |
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