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On the Terrace

Jean-Baptiste Paterc. 1730/1735

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
Washington, DC, United States

  • Title: On the Terrace
  • Creator: Jean-Baptiste Joseph Pater
  • Date Created: c. 1730/1735
  • Physical Dimensions: overall: 71.8 x 100 cm (28 1/4 x 39 3/8 in.) framed: 90.2 x 117.5 x 8.9 cm (35 1/2 x 46 1/4 x 3 1/2 in.)
  • Provenance: George M. Salting [1835-1909], London;[1] sold 1901 to (Thos. Agnew and Sons Ltd., London); sold the same year to (Asher Wertheimer, London).[2] Nikolaus von Uthemann [d. 1925; the name also spelled Utheman and Huthemann], St. Petersburg and Lucerne, by 1914;[3] sold May 1925 to (Lucerne Fine Art Co./Boehler & Steinmeyer, Lucerne);[4] sold to Ralph Harman [1873-1931] and Mary Batterman [d. 1951] Booth, Grosse Point, Michigan, by December 1926;[5] by inheritance to their daughter and son-in-law, William D. and Virginia Booth Vogel, Milwaukee; gift 1955 to NGA. [1] According to the article "Mr. Asher Wertheimer's Exhibition," _Connoisseur_ V (April 1903): supplement. [2] The Getty Provenance Index kindly provided a copy of the page from the Agnew's stock book (in NGA curatorial files) that lists the painting as number 9797, titled _Fête Champetre_. The stock book confirms the purchase from Salting, with half profit to Charles Fairfax Murray, and the sale to Wertheimer. [3] Frederick William Steinmeyer, letter to Ralph Harman Booth, 10 February 1926, copy in NGA curatorial files. The letter reads: "Afterwards it was in the collection of His Excellency von Utheman, who was the private secretary to the Czar of Russia. It hung in his palace at St. Petersburg up to the time of the Revolution, when some of his faithful servants took this picture with other valuables to the protection of the British Consul, who after the War [World War I] returned them to Utheman." The 1914 date comes from information about the painting provided by Steinmeyer along with this letter to Booth. [4] See note 3. The letter continues: "We bought the picture directly from His Excellency von Utheman in Geneva. His Excellency died this summer in Lucerne." As the letter was written in February, the second sentence was probably meant to read "this past summer," putting Von Uthemann's death in 1925. A letter to Ralph Harman Booth dated Lucerne, 21 August 1925, on letterhead that reads "The Lucerne Fine Art Co. Ltd., Management Boehler & Steinmeyer" indicates that the picture was by then in Munich and quotes the asking price. The Getty Provenance Index also provided a copy of the page from the Julius Bohler records that lists the painting as stock number 134-25, bought from Uthemann on 28 May 1925. [5] The Booths lent the painting to an exhibition that opened 2 December 1926 at the Detroit Institute of Arts.
  • Medium: oil on canvas
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

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