Erotic watercolour was executed on the turn 20th century by listed French painter Albert Joseph Pénot (1862 – 1930). He was known for female nudes and landscapes. Today, he is more popularly and specifically recognized for a subset of paintings centering on women of darker, more macabre themes. In 2018, his “The Bat Woman” was sold for £137,500.
Pénot was concerned first and foremost with anatomically accurate portrayals of women. Singular female forms were the implicit focus of his work, whereas the worlds surrounding his characters are seldom realized beyond misty atmospheres and patches of shadow and light. Environments are incidental and are typically shrouded in haze, giving the figures themselves explicit priority. However, Pénot was more versatile in his artistry, and was not confined exclusively to female nudes: church figures were another of his subjects, in addition to occasional compositions depicting scenes of men and women from high society in narratives framed by more conventional settings.
Literature: Thieme/Becker XXVI, 1932, 386 , Benezit, on-line Wikipedia.
Inscription: signed lower right.
Technique: watercolour on paper, matted and framed.
Measurements: image w 17 2/3" x h 12 2/3" (45,3 x 32 cm), unframed w 24" x h 18 1/8" (61 x 46 cm), framed w 26 3/4" x h 20 3/4" (68 x 52,8 cm)
Condition: in very good condition. |