Gabriel de Saint-Aubin (1736-1807)
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 2… Read more These charming mise en scene of ladies and gentlemen at leisure are wonderful evocations of life during the Ancien Régime. At the time they were made the Tuileries Gardens were a popular meeting place for fashionable Parisiens. To meet the demand for adequate seating, chairs were introduced in 1760, which were available to rent. This resulted in an even greater number of visitors, and the unforeseen nuisance of dust being stirred up on the unpaved paths. To reduce the dust, barrels of water mounted on wheels were introduced to dampen the walkways. The etchings were probably intended to be placed side by side, forming a wide angle view of this section of the garden.
Gabriel de Saint-Aubin (1736-1807)

Spectacle de Tuileries: Le Chaises (Dacier 18)

Details
Gabriel de Saint-Aubin (1736-1807)
Spectacle de Tuileries: Le Chaises (Dacier 18)
etching and drypoint, 1760-63, watermark Letters, a good impression of this rare print, second, final state, trimmed inside the platemark but outside the borderline on three sides, trimmed just inside the borderline at right, with a diagonal flattened crease, otherwise in good condition; with its companion print Spectacle des Tuileries: Le Tonneau d'Arrosage (D. 19), etching and drypoint, 1760-62, partial watermark Letters, a good impression of this rare print, second, final state, trimmed within the platemark but outside the borderline
S. 105 x 193 mm. (D. 18) S. 96 x 192 mm. (D. 19)
Provenance
A Private European Collection; then by descent to the present owners.
Special Notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 20% on the buyer's premium.

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Charlie Scott
Charlie Scott

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