PARIS.- Christies announced its traditional Spring Old Master Drawings sale which will take place on 24 March. This sale will feature an exceptional collection of some thirty works on paper mainly assembled in the 1990s by a young European connoisseur couple living in New York at the time.
Great lovers of contemporary art and close to the artists occupying the contemporary art scene, such as Andy Warhol or Jean-Michel Basquiat, the couple also had a strong interest in Italian drawings, buying with their hearts. By instinct, and following the advice of Charles Ryskamp (1963-1987), at the time director of the Morgan Library in New York, they attended auctions and the important galleries of Old Masters in search of a strong image without ever letting themselves be guided by fashion or convention.
The ensemble, mostly composed of Italian sheets of the sixteenth- and seventeenth centuries, and often presenting figure studies, still reflects today the eclecticism of a multi-disciplinary taste of great modernity.
Among the highlights of this sale, we can mention an astonishing Two studies of skeletons finely executed in pen and brown ink by Giovanni Battista Franco (circa 1510-1561), estimated at 200,000-300,000. The drawing comes from the former collection of the sculptor and historian of medieval and curator at the Louvre, Anatole Marquet de Vasselot (1836-1918).
Additional highlights include a Study of a man yelling, a particularly strong drawing in black and red chalk by Camillo Procaccini (1551-1629), estimated at 60,000-80,000. Some of the works in the collection are French in origin, not the least of which is Time fighting youth executed with pen and brown ink, signed and dated 1588 by Jacques Quesnel (died 1629), a rare French artist whose drawing is the only work known by him today. It is estimated between 80,000 and 120,000 euros.
Finally, the Netherlandish School will be presented through one of the other highlight of the sale, a scene depicting Ovids Metamorphoses by Hendrick Goltzius (1558-1617), preparatory to an engraving and illustrating the striking scene where Lycaon is transformed into a wolf (estimate: 200,000-300,000).