Citation
Chicago:
Blythe Sobol, “Attributed to Villers, Portrait of a Man, Probably Louis Auguste Juvénal des Ursins d’Harville, ca. 1784,” catalogue entry in Aimee Marcereau DeGalan, Blythe Sobol, and Maggie Keenan, The Starr Collection of Portrait Miniatures, 1500–1850: The Collections of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, vol. 1, ed. Aimee Marcereau DeGalan (Kansas City, MO: Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 2024), https://doi.org/10.37764/8322.5.2245.
MLA:
Sobol, Blythe. “Attributed to Villers, Portrait of a Man, Probably Louis Auguste Juvénal des Ursins d’Harville, ca. 1784,” catalogue entry. Aimee Marcereau DeGalan, Blythe Sobol, and Maggie Keenan. The Starr Collection of Portrait Miniatures, 1500–1850: The Collections of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, edited by Aimee Marcereau DeGalan, vol. 1, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 2024. doi: 10.37764/8322.5.2245.
Artist's Biography
See the artist’s biography in volume 4.
Catalogue Entry
This portrait of a previously unknown man probably depicts Louis Auguste Juvénal des Ursins d’Harville (1749–1815), based on its close resemblance to a portrait of d’Harville by Villers, dated 1784, at the Carnegie Museum of Art (Fig. 1).1The artist Villers is known only by their signed surname, which appears on portrait miniatures dated between 1781 and 1793. We are grateful to Bernd Pappe for his observations on the miniature’s attribution and condition, and for calling our attention to this closely related miniature, during a July 23–25, 2023, visit. Notes in NAMA curatorial files. The Nelson-Atkins miniature may be a high-quality copy due to its lack of a signature, although our ability to interpret its appearance, as the artist originally intended, is impacted by alterations and additions made by later restorers. The miniature was resized at some point, perhaps to fit it into the larger nineteenth-century frame;2According to conversations with visiting conservator Carol Aiken from 2017 to 2019. Notes in NAMA curatorial files. the ivory: The hard white substance originating from elephant, walrus, or narwhal tusks, often used as the support for portrait miniatures. support was inlaid onto a larger piece of card/prepared card: Seventeenth-century miniatures were typically painted on a piece of vellum prepared with gesso mounted to a playing card. Also referred to as “tablets” and sometimes table-book leaves, although that was a specific format. See also vellum; table-book leaf. See also burnished. and overpainted to disguise this change.3See treatment report by conservator Stephanie Spence, 2018, NAMA curatorial files. More closely cropped, the Carnegie miniature ends just below the sitter’s lacy white cravat: A cravat, the precursor to the modern necktie and bowtie, is a rectangular strip of fabric tied around the neck in a variety of ornamental arrangements. Depending on social class and budget, cravats could be made in a variety of materials, from muslin or linen to silk or imported lace. It was originally called a “Croat” after the Croatian military unit whose neck scarves first caused a stir when they visited the French court in the 1660s.. The two miniatures are also reversed, with the sitter’s queue: The long curl of a wig. falling to opposite sides of his shoulder in each portrait. While no print reproduction of these portraits has been identified, d’Harville, a well-known figure in the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars: A series of major global conflicts fought during Napoleon Bonaparte’s imperial rule over France, from 1805 to 1815., was painted in large at least twice.4Unknown, Louis-Auguste Juvénal des Ursins d’Harville, ca. 1809, oil on canvas, dimensions and location unknown, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Louis_Auguste_Juvénal_des_Ursins_d’Harville.jpg; Jacques Louis David, Coronation of Emperor Napoleon I and Coronation of Empress Josephine in Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, December 2, 1804, 1806–7, oil on canvas, 244 1/2 x 385 7/16 in. (621 x 979 cm), Louvre, Paris, https://collections.louvre.fr/en/ark:/53355/cl010065720. D’Harville can be seen at the center of the painting, to the left of Étienne Hubert de Cambacérès, Archbishop of Rouen, who wears a tall white-and-gold bishop’s miter.
Louis Auguste Juvénal des Ursins d’Harville was a French aristocrat, military officer, and politician whose democratic sympathies led him to switch sides and join the revolutionary cause in 1791.5Jean-François Robinet, Dictionnaire Historique et Biographique de la Révolution et de l’Empire, 1789–1815 (Paris: Librairie Historique de la Révolution et de l’Empire, 1898), 2:142. Later portraits of d’Harville in middle age exhibit the squared jaw and large, heavily lidded blue eyes of the Nelson-Atkins and Carnegie miniatures; this includes the depiction of his face by Jacques Louis David (1748– 1825) in his monumental 1807 painting Coronation of Napoleon I and Coronation of Empress Josephine, due to his appointment as First Equerry to the Empress.6Frédéric Masson, Joséphine: Empress and Queen (New York: Goupil, 1899), 144. A study of d’Harville’s portrait for the coronation scene is at the Fogg Art Museum at Harvard. Jacques Louis David, Comte d’Harville, General and Senator, 1805–24, black crayon, squared in black crayon, on off-white antique laid paper, 8 1/4 x 6 7/16 in. (21 x 16.4 cm), Harvard University Art Museums, Cambridge, 1943.1815.13.23, https://harvardartmuseums.org/collections/object/190491. For the finished painting, see n. 4.
Notes
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The artist Villers is known only by their signed surname, which appears on portrait miniatures dated between 1781 and 1793. We are grateful to Bernd Pappe for his observations on the miniature’s attribution and condition, and for calling our attention to this closely related miniature, during a July 23–25, 2023, visit. Notes in NAMA curatorial files.
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According to conversations with visiting conservator Carol Aiken from 2017 to 2019. Notes in NAMA curatorial files.
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See treatment report by conservator Stephanie Spence, 2018, NAMA curatorial files.
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Unknown, Louis Auguste Juvénal des Ursins d’Harville, ca. 1809, oil on canvas, dimensions and location unknown, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Louis_Auguste_Juvénal_des_Ursins_d'Harville.jpg; Jacques Louis David, Coronation of Emperor Napoleon I and Coronation of Empress Josephine in Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, December 2, 1804, 1806–7, oil on canvas, 244 1/2 x 385 7/16 in. (621 x 979 cm), Louvre, Paris, https://collections.louvre.fr/en/ark:/53355/cl010065720. D’Harville can be seen at the center of the painting, to the left of Étienne Hubert de Cambacérès, Archbishop of Rouen, who wears a tall white-and-gold bishop’s miter.
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Jean-François Robinet, Dictionnaire Historique et Biographique de la Révolution et de l’Empire, 1789–1815 (Paris: Librairie Historique de la Révolution et de l’Empire, 1898), 2:142.
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Frédéric Masson, Joséphine: Empress and Queen (New York: Goupil, 1899), 144. A study of d’Harville’s portrait for the coronation scene is at the Fogg Art Museum at Harvard. Jacques Louis David, Comte d’Harville, General and Senator, 1805–24, black crayon, squared in black crayon, on off-white antique laid paper, 8 1/4 x 6 7/16 in. (21 x 16.4 cm), Harvard University Art Museums, Cambridge, 1943.1815.13.23, https://harvardartmuseums.org/collections/object/190491. For the finished painting, see n. 4.
Provenance
Mr. John W. (1905–2000) and Mrs. Martha Jane (1906–2011) Starr, Kansas City, MO, by 1958;
Their gift to The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO, 1958.
References
Ross E. Taggart, ed., Handbook of the Collections in the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art and Mary Atkins Museum of Fine Arts, 4th ed. (Kansas City, MO: William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art and Mary Atkins Museum of Fine Arts, 1959), 265.
Ross E. Taggart, The Starr Collection of Miniatures in the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery (Kansas City, MO: Nelson Gallery-Atkins Museum, 1971), no. 202, p. 68, (repro.), as by unknown artist, Unknown Man.
No known exhibitions at this time. If you have additional information on this object, please tell us more.