Offered by Poncelin de Raucourt Fine Arts
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Paintings and drawings, from 16th to 19th century
Attributed to Joseph Parrocel (1646–1704)
Study of a Horseman Charging His Opponent
Black chalk on cream paper
20 × 29 cm
Provenance:
– William Bateson Collection (1861–1926), pioneering British geneticist
– His sale, Sotheby’s, London, 23 April 1929, lot 150
– Private Collection, Netherlands
– Private Collection, France
This dynamic black chalk drawing depicts a cavalryman charging a turbaned opponent—an evocation of Christian-Ottoman conflicts such as the Battle of Vienna (1683). The composition is marked by its sense of movement, anatomical precision, and sculptural presence.
Previously sold at Sotheby’s as a work by Jacques Courtois, recent research points toward a more convincing attribution to Joseph Parrocel, one of the foremost battle painters of Louis XIV’s reign. The pose of the horseman closely matches a painting attributed to Parrocel and sold in 2015, and the influence of Antonio Tempesta is also apparent.
A complete study by art historian François Marandet is available on request.