The Kimbell Artwork Museum has acquired The Minimize Melon (1760), a nonetheless life by Jean Siméon Chardin, from the Rothschild household, after an public sale sale final 12 months in Paris fell via. The work went on view on the Fort Price, Texas establishment on 22 Could within the gallery dedicated to French nonetheless lifes from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries.
“The Minimize Melon is among the nice masterpieces of 18th-century French portray,” says the Kimbell’s director Eric Lee, who negotiated the take care of the Rothschild household, including: “It’s no secret that now we have lengthy hoped for an important Chardin nonetheless life for the Kimbell.”
The portray was offered at public sale by Christie’s in Paris in June 2024 for a file €26.7m, the very best worth ever obtained for a French 18th-century portray and the costliest Outdated Grasp work ever offered in France, the corporate boasted on the time. Sadly the successful bidder, an Italian actual property promoter based mostly in Saint Moritz, Switzerland named Nanni Bassani Antivari, by no means paid a cent. Christie’s sued him in Paris, asking for compensation of €195,000.
The Rothschild household took the panel again and offered it on to the Kimbell, leaving the public sale home apart. The worth tag has not been disclosed, however The Artwork Newspaper understands it’s considerably decrease than the Christie’s hammer worth of €23m, however far more than the public sale home’s estimate of €8m to €12m.
The Kimbell was the underbidder on the public sale, and its failure to take residence the work was its second such disappointment over a Chardin portray. Only one 12 months earlier than, at Artcurial, the museum was the successful bidder for a distinct nonetheless lifetime of the identical interval by Chardin, exhibiting a platter of untamed strawberries. Nevertheless, its export was blocked and the work was bought by the Musée du Louvre for a staggering €24.3m because of a wide-ranging crowdfunding marketing campaign.
The Minimize Melon, which has saved its authentic body since its exhibition on the Royal Academy’s Salon in 1761, comes from legendary collections. It shaped a pair with a portray of a jar of apricots in brandy, acquired by the Artwork Gallery of Ontario in Toronto in 1962. Each compositions share a uncommon oval form. The pair was bought by King Louis XV’s goldsmith Jacques Roëttiers, earlier than becoming a member of the gathering based by François Martial Marcille, an early admirer of Chardin. It was purchased at Drouot from the Marcilles’ inheritance in 1876 by Charlotte de Rothschild, the widow of baron Nathaniel de Rothschild. Each nonetheless lifes stayed within the household till their sale.
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