Null ANNA GAULT DE SAINT GERMAN (Poland, 1760-1832).
Untitled.
Pencil on paper.
…
Description

ANNA GAULT DE SAINT GERMAN (Poland, 1760-1832). Untitled. Pencil on paper. Signed on the back. Measurements: 62 x 47 cm. Anna Gault began her training at a very young age with her father Józef Rajecki, who was a painter and was known for his portraits. Later Anna left the family home as she became the protégée of King Stanis?aw August Poniatowski of Poland. Despite continuing to paint, she was not well received by the court, but in 1783 Anna enrolled at the art school for women at the Louvre (Paris). She studied with Ludwik Marteau and Marcello Bacciarelli in Warsaw; Jean-Baptiste Greuze and possibly Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun in Paris. Later, however, he became part of the circle surrounding Jacques-Louis David. It was in Paris that she married the miniaturist, Pierre-Marie Gault de Saint-Germain. She became the first Polish woman to exhibit her work at the Salon in 1791. Although she sent many paintings to Warsaw, Bacciarelli considered few worthy of adding to the Royal Collection. She nevertheless continued to paint for the Polish royal court circle and, in Paris, received numerous commissions from the local aristocracy, thanks to the reluctant influence of the king's agent, Filippo Mazzei. During the Reign of Terror, she fled Paris for Clermont-Ferrand.

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ANNA GAULT DE SAINT GERMAN (Poland, 1760-1832). Untitled. Pencil on paper. Signed on the back. Measurements: 62 x 47 cm. Anna Gault began her training at a very young age with her father Józef Rajecki, who was a painter and was known for his portraits. Later Anna left the family home as she became the protégée of King Stanis?aw August Poniatowski of Poland. Despite continuing to paint, she was not well received by the court, but in 1783 Anna enrolled at the art school for women at the Louvre (Paris). She studied with Ludwik Marteau and Marcello Bacciarelli in Warsaw; Jean-Baptiste Greuze and possibly Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun in Paris. Later, however, he became part of the circle surrounding Jacques-Louis David. It was in Paris that she married the miniaturist, Pierre-Marie Gault de Saint-Germain. She became the first Polish woman to exhibit her work at the Salon in 1791. Although she sent many paintings to Warsaw, Bacciarelli considered few worthy of adding to the Royal Collection. She nevertheless continued to paint for the Polish royal court circle and, in Paris, received numerous commissions from the local aristocracy, thanks to the reluctant influence of the king's agent, Filippo Mazzei. During the Reign of Terror, she fled Paris for Clermont-Ferrand.

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ANNA GAULT DE SAINT GERMAIN (WARSAW, 1760-PARIS, 1832) PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN WEARING A WREATH OF FLOWERS SELF-PORTRAIT ? Oval pastel Old restorations Signed on the left "Gault de St Germain / née Rajecka / fecit"; old auction label on the reverse bearing no. 3 Portrait of woman, oval pastel, with restorations, signed 61 x 50 CM - 24 x 19,6 IN. Exhibition Probably Salon de 1791, no. 166 (Portrait ovale de femme). Anna Rajecka is the daughter of portrait painter Josef Rajecki. Her brother was also a painter. She trained with Marteau and Bacciarelli. Thanks to the patronage of Stanislas II, King of Poland, who sent her to Paris in 1783, Anna completed her artistic training, probably under the tutelage of Greuze and Vigée Le Brun. The king commissioned her to paint a series of oil portraits of eminent figures. His mature period in Paris was marked by compositions reminiscent of Kucharski's, but with a softer, airier palette. In 1788, Anna married miniaturist Pierre-Marie Gault de Saint-Germain. However, the French Revolution and the Terror forced them to flee to Clermont-Ferrand in 1792, where Anna continued to practice her art, creating portraits for local notables. In 1791, critics presented the painting as Portrait ovale de femme, par madame Gault de Saint-Germain. "This pleasant head makes us wish Madame Gault had painted herself. Then we could congratulate her on the amiable rotundity of her two hot-air balloons". Provenance: Anonymous sale, Paris, Hôtel Drouot (Maître Baudoin), December 21, 1934, no. 3 Bibliography: Neil Jeffares, Dictionary of pastellists before 1800, online edition, no. J. 34.1612 (Dame en robe blanche couronne de fleurs, circa 1810), accessed May 2024.