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Saturday, 23 March 2019

"Madame X" and the Marcadé Collection


During the past few years I have tried hard to verify the identity the woman whose manuscript illuminations were auctioned anonymously at the Galerie Georges Petit, Paris, on 6 December 1926:
Title-page
[detail]
"Catalogue des enluminures de hautes époques, tirés des manuscrits et antiphonaires ... appartenant a Madame X ... dont la vente aux enchères publique aura lieu Galerie Georges Petit ... le lundi 6 décembre 1926"
The catalogue contains a number of very interesting cuttings and leaves. The one at the top of this post was lot 2, and is among the illuminations recently given by Sanda Hindman to the Art Institute of Chicago [1]:

Lot 1 is this very curious image of a monk-scribe apparently taking a break from his work:
"1  Scribe écrivant. Lettre A découpée dans un manuscrit français ... un moine assis sur un escabeau muni d'une planchette servant d'écritoire ... "
 
This cutting is now in the McCarthy collection:
Its strange iconography is apparently based on an Evangelist portrait of St John, in which his pose, looking up towards our left, is explained by the presence of the Dove:

The first item in lot 4 is this cutting of a female saint, also in the McCarthy Collection:

"4  Buste de la Vierge ... "
This was formerly in the Lehman Collection (later deposited at The Met), and it is from the description in de Ricci's Census that we know that it comes from the 1926 sale of "Madame X".

de Ricci identifies Madame X as "Madame Fould", but extensive searching has failed to reveal any biographical information about a likely Madame Fould. The closest I have got to a potential answer is that Lugt’s Répertoire des catalogues de ventes publiques includes an anonymous sale in Paris on 24 June 1925, identified as that of Léon Fould. So one possibility is that Léon Fould was an heir of a Madame Fould, and he sold her collection in Paris in the mid-1920s.

Although I still do not know anything about Madame Fould, I am now confident that de Ricci's identification is correct (as I expected it to be), because I have now found support from another source.

When working on the Beaupré Antiphonary leaves last week, I learned for the first time of the Marcadé collection of illuminations at Bordeaux cathedral. As well as a  a cutting from the Beaupré Antiphonary, there is this miniature of the Adoration of the Magi:
It is not of especially high quality, but of interest to me is what is written on the back:

[enhanced detail]
"No 20 ... Dec. 1926. Vente Fould ... Manuscrit Ecole Française du XV-Siecle"
Lot 20 in the "Madame X" sale corresponds (allowing for the fact that Books of Hours are sometimes referred to as Missals) to this leaf:
"Les Rois Mages. Feuillet de missel français du XVe siècle."

***

None of the other Marcadé manuscripts have similar inscriptions. The only other ones that I "recognise" are these three cuttings:
 
 
which must presumably come from the same volume as these three, at the Cleveland Museum of Art [source]:
 
 
and this one, which was auctioned in 2010:
[EDIT, 22 Aug. 2020: previously Sotheby's, 3 July 1984, lot 13]

Charlotte Denoël of the BnF has an article in press about the Marcadé illuminations; it is an interesting collection that deserves to be better known.


EDIT, 23 May 2019
It looks like this is from the same book as the one above:

Gilhofer & Ranschburg, Vienna, Sammlung Franz Trau: Münzen der römischen Kaiser. Versteigerung: 22. Mai 1935lot 89
EDIT 22 August 2020
I am now not at all confident that the cutting immediately above is from the same manuscript, but it is generically similar. Another cutting that does appear to be from the same manuscript was sold at Sotheby's, 21 June 1994, lot 22, bought by Fogg and subsequently in the Zeileis collection:

[Edit, 18 August 2023:] I think this leaf must be from the same book:

 Paris, Musée Marmottan Monet,
Wildenstein collection, M-6178 [Source]


[1] Christopher de Hamel, The Medieval World at Our Fingertips: Manuscript Illuminations from the Collection of Sandra Hindman, 2018, cat.no.2, not citing the 1926 auction.


2 comments:

  1. There are several possible Foulds from the BnF catalogue. But it is noticeable that part of the book collection of Achille Fould (1800-1867) was sold in 1920-2 with that of M. Rattier (BnF Notice n° : FRBNF36535202). Achille was a politician and collector. A monograph on the family is: Dauzat. Noms de famille . - Finance et politique ; la dynastie des Fould / F. Barbier, 1991 Notice n° : FRBNF12235201

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