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Lot 72

A portrait of the Ottoman Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent (1494-1566), by Claudius Marcel Popelin
France, dated 1863

23 April 2013, 10:30 BST
London, New Bond Street

Sold for £18,750 inc. premium

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A portrait of the Ottoman Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent (1494-1566), by Claudius Marcel Popelin
France, dated 1863

enamel on porcelain, with inscription at top: SOLIMANUS MAGNUS TURCARUM IMP., inscribed on reverse Claudius Popelius 1863 framed
80 x 60 mm.; frame 152 x 130 mm.

Footnotes

Claudius Popelius (French, 1825-92)

French enameller, painter and writer Claudius Marcel Popelin was a pupil of François-Edouard Picot until 1846 and of Ary Scheffer from 1848 to 1858. He began his career as an historical painter, and from 1852 to 1862 he sent paintings based on French and Italian Renaissance subjects to the Salon; from 1860, however, his study of the 16th Century inclined him towards the decorative arts. He translated Cipriano di Michele Piccolpasso's Li tre libri dell'arte del vasaio of 1556-9 and, though initially producing faience, he preferred the delicate technique of painting on enamel, which he learnt from Alfred Meyer (1832-1904). Working in the tradition of the 16th Century Limosin family, from 1863 he devoted the next 30 years to the art of enamelling. His first works have intense colours enhanced by the sparkle of silver foil beneath and are notable for the backgrounds coloured with a violet of his own invention. He liked to assemble several enamel plaques together within the same frame to develop a single allegorical or historical theme, as in his portrait of Napoleon III of 1865 in the Musee d'Orsay, Paris which also includes portraits of Charlemagne, Napoleon I and others. His masterpiece, Triumph of Truth, exhibited in the Salon in 1867, consisted of portraits of 12 philosophers arranged around the central figure.

His success resulted in orders from manufacturers, and his enamels were used to decorate furniture, bronzes, silver and gold objects and bookbinding plates. Popelin was an erudite artist, a bibliophile and a poet and was one of the circle of artists who met at the salons of Princess Mathilde Bonaparte, who became his wife in 1873. He popularized the art of enamelling through several theoretical essays. With the help of photography, after 1870 he adopted the more subtle technique of enamelling in gold grisaille to execute a series of portraits of contemporary celebrities, for example, Baron Hippolyte Lazzey in 1890 (Musee d'Orsay, Paris). A retrospective of Popelin's work was organized at the Musee des Arts Decoratifs in Paris following his death in 1892.

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