This genre scene with resting hunters was executed in the late 18th century and have close criteria to be attributed to the hand of German - French painter Jacques François Joseph Swebach-Desfontaines (1769 Metz - 1823 Paris).
After study of drawing in Metz by his father Francois-Louis Swebach, he moved to Paris where he studied under Michel H. Duplessis. By 1788 Jacques-Francois had gained a certain reputation for his paintings and drawings of soldiers and horses. He exhibited at the Salon between 1791 and1823 and received a medal in the Salon of 1810. Between 1802 and 1813 he became Premier Peintre at the Sévres porcelain factory and was involved in the decoration of several services. Until ca. 1808 he painted landscapes in collaboration with the French painter Georges Michel. From 1815 to 1820 he worked in St. Petersburg for Tsar Alexander I as Premier Peintre to the Imperial porcelain factory, but continued to send small paintings to the Salon de Paris. During his stay in Russia Swebach achieved a wide popularity among the Russian aristocracy. The works he sent from Russia to the Salon de Paris gained him the favor of critics, who praised his pictures as being full of "wit and refinement" and described him as the "Wouwerman of our time". Apart from a few official commissions still in France, such as the "Cavalcade and Drive in Barouches" for the Chateau de Malmaison (1800; Montpellier Musée Fabre), he worked for private collectors, who prized his small paintings for the accuracy in the depiction of horses, the proliferation of detail and anecdotes, the precise drawing and the bright colors. He was condemned by his success to repeat the same pictures to please his clients; hunting scenes and horse markets, military convoys and skirmishes. He was a rival of Jean-Louis Demarne in the representation of such scenes, set in brilliantly lit landscapes and portrayed with a precision and naivety reminiscent of Nicolas-Antoine Taunay, although less poetic. He could depict narrative and characterize small group scenes with humor, somewhat in the manner of Louis-Léopold Boilly. Swebach also produced many engravings; he participated in the "Complete Collection of Historical Scenes of the French Revolution" (1802) and engraved the "French Campaign under the Consulate and the Empire: Album of 52 battles and 100 portraits of Marshals". He collected his graphic works in the "Picturesque Encyclopaedia" (1806).
Works of this artist can be viewed in most important museum worldwide: France, Russia, Germany, USA, etc.
Literature: Artist lexicons by Thieme/Becker, Benezit and others.
Inscription: unsigned.
Technique: oil on wood panel, original period gold-plated frame.
Measurements: unframed w 15 3/4" x h 11 7/8" (40 x 30 cm), framed w 21 1/2" x h 17 1/2" (54,5 x 44,5 cm)
Condition: in very good condition. |