TOULOUSE-LAUTREC (H. de) "Portrait of a Bearded Man". Small - Lot 419

Lot 419
Go to lot
Estimation :
2000 - 3000 EUR
Register for the sale on drouot.com
TOULOUSE-LAUTREC (H. de) "Portrait of a Bearded Man". Small - Lot 419
TOULOUSE-LAUTREC (H. de) "Portrait of a Bearded Man". Small grease pencil drawing on recovered paper, mounted on embossed paper. This drawing was given by the artist to the painter Henry Cassiers, when he visited him in Brussels. In 1888, Toulouse-Lautrec was refused entry to the official Salon in Paris. At the age of 24, he met the Ghent painter Théodore van Rysselberghe in a café on Boulevard de Clichy. The latter had gathered around him a group of young painters in Brussels, the XX, who had been rejected by the official jury, and he intended to call in foreign artists to form the nucleus from which modern Belgian art would emerge. The XX introduced the Impressionists to Belgium, and above all the Neo-Impressionists. Van Rysselberghe sent a letter to Octave Maus, whose advisor he was at the time, telling him enthusiastically about Lautrec: "Le petit Bas-du-Cul, pas mal du tout; le bonhomme a du talent. Definitely XX, never exhibited. Is currently doing some very funny things. Circus Fernando, p..., and all that. Knows a lot of people. He's good, finally. The idea of being at XX with Rue de Sèze and Rues Laffite, he thinks it's so chic! As of now, I've seen three or four things that will make an impression at Les XX...". It was during one of his three stays in Brussels that Toulouse-Lautrec gave Cassiers this drawing. Henry Cassiers later gave it to his painter friend Hubert van den Bossche. The drawing comes directly from the painter's descendants.
My orders
Sale information
Sales conditions
Return to catalogue