Auction House: Heritage Auction Galleries
Auction Location: Dallas, TX, USA
1518 Slocum Street
Dallas, TX
USA
75207
Phone: +1 800 872 6467
Fax: +1 214 528 3500
Email: ArtFact@HA.com
Auction Title: Signature European & American Art
Auction Date: November 11, 2009
Description: CHARLES SPRAGUE PEARCE (American, 1851-1914) Moments of Thoughtfulness, 1882 Oil on canvas 21-1/2 x 29 inches (54.6 x 73.7 cm) Signed lower left: Charles Sprague Pearce / Paris PROVENANCE: Estate of the artist; Vanderbilt Estate, Cambridge, Massachusetts, circa 1920s; By descent in the family, until 1999; Private collection, Maine, 1999-2000; Private collection, 2000-2009. Charles Sprague Pearce was one of the most poetic and highly regarded American painters of French peasant subjects. Born in Boston, he was the grandson of the noted poet and banker Charles Pearce, who participated in the Boston Tea Party. After his graduation from the Boston Latin School, the aspiring painter worked as a merchant in the China trade, painting all the while. In 1873, upon the advice of William Morris Hunt, Pearce travelled to Paris where he studied in the atelier of Leon Bonnat alongside classmate John Singer Sargent. In the early 1880s he settled permanently in the small village of Auvers-sur-Oise, some 20 miles from Paris, where he devoted himself to painting tender and beautifully observed scenes of peasant life in a style strongly influenced by Jules Bastien Lepage and Jules Breton, which blends the freedom of Barbizon brushwork with an academic treatment of the figure. His reputation soon soared. The American expatriate showed regularly at the Paris Salon and received numerous awards, including the pinnacle of French distinction, the Legion of Honor. Though based in France, Pearce always maintained close ties with the United States. He served as chairman of the Parisian jury for the Chicago Exposition of 1893 and the St. Louis Exposition of 1904, and in the 1890s executed a series of six lunette murals for the Library of Congress. Prior to 1999, Moments of Thoughtfulness remained for 70 years in the same American family, who received it as a gift from the Vanderbilt estate in Cambridge, Massachusetts, during the 1920s. It is very likely that the Vanderbilt family acquired the painting directly from Pearce. This important painting's wonderful condition on an unlined canvas is a testament to its longevity in a private collection. Particularly well-preserved is the nearly life-sized face of the young, dark-haired girl. It is rendered with impeccable draftsmanship and a high degree of finish fully comparable to the best work of Pearce's contemporary, the great French academician Bouguereau. Contrasting with the porcelain quality of the figurative passage is the brushy, blisteringly white sky, a trademark of the revolutionary French landscapist Corot. The high horizon line of the hillside, as well as the gestural treatment of the wide grassy field sprinkled with red poppies in bloom, show Pearce's awareness of Impressionistic techniques, as well as of specific Japanese pictorial conventions informing contemporary French painting. In this one remarkable work, Pearce blended a constellation of influences, demonstrating how attuned he had been to the major trends in French art of his period.

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