PIERRE-ANTOINE PATEL (PARIS 1648-1707)
PIERRE-ANTOINE PATEL (PARIS 1648-1707)
PIERRE-ANTOINE PATEL (PARIS 1648-1707)
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PIERRE-ANTOINE PATEL (PARIS 1648-1707)
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PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE CALIFORNIA COLLECTION
PIERRE-ANTOINE PATEL (PARIS 1648-1707)

A pair of architectural capriccios, the first known as 'L'Agréable rencontre'

Details
PIERRE-ANTOINE PATEL (PARIS 1648-1707)
A pair of architectural capriccios, the first known as 'L'Agréable rencontre'
the first: signed and dated 'AP / Patel 1705' ('AP' linked, lower left, on the plinth)
oil on canvas
25 3/4 x 32 1/4 in. (65.4 x 81.9 cm.), each
a pair
Provenance
Johann Anton de Peters (1725-1795), Paris; his sale, Remy Basan, Paris, 9-13 March 1779, lot 99, as Pierre Patel with figures by de Loutherbourg (135 livres to Dubois).
with Eric Coatalem, Paris, where acquired by the present owner.
Literature
C. Le Blanc, Manuel de l'amateur d'estampes, I, Paris, 1854, p. 267, no. 27 (for the prints after the first painting, which is given to 'B. Patel le jeune').
N. Coural, Les Patel: Pierre Patel (1605-1676) et ses fils: Le paysage de ruines à Paris au XVIIe siècle, Paris, 2001, pp. 313-314, 389, nos. PAP G 1, PAP G 2, V. 108 (for the prints after the first painting and Saint Aubin's sketches).
Engraved
the first: Pierre-Paul Benazech (c. 1730-after 1783)
Sale Room Notice
Please note we are grateful to Natalie Coural for endorsing the attribution on the basis of photographs.

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Lot Essay

Pierre-Antoine Patel was the son of the landscape painter Pierre-Patel. Like his father, Pierre-Antoine specialized in classical landscapes strongly influenced by Claude Lorrain and worked independently of the Académie Royale. Only about fifty paintings by him are known today, though this is supplemented by a number of gouaches which generally date to the final fifteen years of his life.

Something of the pair's early provenance can be gleaned from a pair of summary sketches made by Gabriel de Saint Aubin in his copy of the sale of the miniaturist Johann Anton de Peters held in March 1779 (fig. 1). The first painting was also engraved with minor differences to the background by Pierre-Paul Benazech under the title 'L'Agréable rencontre', with the print issued in both French and English text versions. The inscription on the print gave the painting simply to ‘Patel’, which likely accounts for the confusion introduced by Charles Le Blanc in the mid-nineteenth century. Le Blanc wrongly attributed the painting to one ‘B. Patel le jeune’, presumably the artist Benoit Nicolas Patel (b. 1701).

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