51
●
HENRY OSSAWA TANNER (1859 - 1937)
Untitled (Study of a Standing Male Nude)
.
Charcoal and pencil on cream laid paper, circa 1891-93. 590x394 mm; 23
1
/
4
x15
1
/
2
inches. Signed in
pencil, upper right recto.
Provenance: the estate of the artist, with the artist’s estate ink stamp, and signed and inscribed “Early
Study in Julien’s, Paris” by the artist’s son Jesse O.Tanner in ink, on the backing paper verso; private
Detroit collection.
This accomplished academic study by Henry Ossawa Tanner is a very scarce work on a paper - a
signed, early figure drawing.We believe this academic study is the earliest and largest drawing by
the artist to come to auction. On the frame back, his son had identified this drawing from “Julien’s”
or the Académie Julian, where Henry Ossawa Tanner studied upon arriving in Paris in 1891. The
recent retrospective
Henry Ossawa Tanner - Modern Spirit
included another impressive example, his
Study of a Negro Man
, circa 1891-93, from the collection of the Detroit Institute of Arts. Anna O.
Marley describes how Tanner could attend weekly studio sessions with the model to create such
académies
or life drawings at the school, which was very popular with American artists at the turn
of the century. In the large Tanner holdings of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, only two
figure studies of the seventeen drawings in their collection appear to be from the same period.
Marley pp. 21 and 182.
[35,000/50,000]