A unique copy of illustrations
to La Fontaine's Fables
by 18th-century French painter and draftsman Jean-Baptiste Oudry sold in New York on Wednesday at auction at Christie's for $2.7 million.
This precious piece for bibliophiles is presented as a thick album of 138 drawings with detailed landscapes, framed by a blue outline, each illustrating one of the famous stories of the French fabulist and poet Jean de La Fontaine, such as
La Grenouille qui vas make it as big as the Beef
,
The Grasshopper and the Ant
or
The Raven and the Fox
.
“Only Intact Volume”
Painter to the court of France under Louis XV, Jean-Baptiste Oudry (1686-1755) had made them in the early 1730s with brush and black ink, but they were not immediately assembled.
It is
"the only intact volume of illustrations by Oudry for La Fontaine"
, explained to AFP Stijn Alsteen, international manager of old drawings at Christie's, specifying that a second volume had existed but was
" dismembered”
and dispersed between collections and museums.
Jean-Baptiste Oudry is considered one of the best illustrators of La Fontaine's fables, along with Gustave Doré and Grandville, and his drawings can be seen in the luxurious Diane de Selliers editions in France.
Read the fileJean de La Fontaine in ten dates
The album, which sold at Sotheby's in 1996 for 550,000 British pounds, the equivalent of more than $850,000 at the time, was part of the JE Safra collection, of which 78 works from the 17th to 19th centuries were sold. for $18.5 million on Wednesday in New York.
The piece was estimated between 1.5 and 2.5 million dollars by Christie's, which did not immediately give information on the buyer.
Last May, Christie's sold a drawing by Michelangelo,
Jeune Homme Nu
(after Masaccio), in Paris for 23 million euros.