Pierre Adolphe Hall
A Lady, standing in a wooded landscape, wearing a white dress with a tiered lace collar and yellow bodice, decorated with bright blue ribbons, flowers in her hair and at her corsage, c. 1770
Watercolour on ivory
Circular, 2 5/8in (68mm) diam.
Philip Mould & Co.
To view all current artworks for sale visit philipmould.com Ormolu frame with engraved border. Pierre Adolphe Hall was born in Sweden but moved to Germany to study painting in...
To view all current artworks for sale visit philipmould.com
Ormolu frame with engraved border.
Pierre Adolphe Hall was born in Sweden but moved to Germany to study painting in Berlin in 1756, in Hamburg in 1758, and then in Stockholm from 1760 to 1766. By 1769 he was in Paris, where he became an associate of the Academy. His work is typified by his imaginative use of colour and fluid brushwork. He soon gained a following for his work on ivory and in enamel. A critic, writing on Hall’s miniatures on the occasion of the Paris Salon of 1777, stated: “Mr Hall attracted the attention of all those who, in enamel and miniature painting, look for the gracefulness in the drawing, the immediacy of the brush and this subtlety of the brushwork, which, while miniaturising the model, bestow new appeal on it”.
The present work, painted circa 1770, would have been an early work during Hall’s settlement in France. Despite his Swedish origins, Hall’s style and subject matter characterised French taste so completely that he is considered one of the greatest French miniaturists of the eighteenth century. This work, painted in gouache, encapsulates the exciting appeal in Hall’s rapid brushwork and vivid colour. Although he excelled at painting women in bucolic settings wearing country-style bodices adorned with fresh flowers, he also painted complex and sincere portraits of some of the most celebrated men of the period, such as the portrait of fellow artist Dominique Vivant Denon (1747-1825) [sold Christie’s, Paris, 23 June 2010, lot 65].
Ormolu frame with engraved border.
Pierre Adolphe Hall was born in Sweden but moved to Germany to study painting in Berlin in 1756, in Hamburg in 1758, and then in Stockholm from 1760 to 1766. By 1769 he was in Paris, where he became an associate of the Academy. His work is typified by his imaginative use of colour and fluid brushwork. He soon gained a following for his work on ivory and in enamel. A critic, writing on Hall’s miniatures on the occasion of the Paris Salon of 1777, stated: “Mr Hall attracted the attention of all those who, in enamel and miniature painting, look for the gracefulness in the drawing, the immediacy of the brush and this subtlety of the brushwork, which, while miniaturising the model, bestow new appeal on it”.
The present work, painted circa 1770, would have been an early work during Hall’s settlement in France. Despite his Swedish origins, Hall’s style and subject matter characterised French taste so completely that he is considered one of the greatest French miniaturists of the eighteenth century. This work, painted in gouache, encapsulates the exciting appeal in Hall’s rapid brushwork and vivid colour. Although he excelled at painting women in bucolic settings wearing country-style bodices adorned with fresh flowers, he also painted complex and sincere portraits of some of the most celebrated men of the period, such as the portrait of fellow artist Dominique Vivant Denon (1747-1825) [sold Christie’s, Paris, 23 June 2010, lot 65].
Provenance
Martin Månssons collections (no.218).Exhibitions
‘Fem Stora Gustavianer’ (‘Five Great Gustavians’) exhibition at the National Museum in Stockholm, Sweden, 3 October – 15 November 1943, no. 218.Be the first to hear about our available artworks
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