Chalck-manner printed in red and black inks, 211
x 156 mm. De Leymarie 188, IFF 188, Jean-Richard 755.
Very fine impression printed with registration
marks on laid paper. In very good condition. Three tiny pinholes on the edges
of the sheet and two slight creases in the upper part on the back.
The plate bears two signatures, Boucher f. engraved on the left and Demarteau S. engraved on the right,
above the first borderline. Depending on the impressions, these signatures are
more or less visible. Buste de jeune fille [Bust of a Young Girl] (IFF 187), also engraved after a drawing
by François Boucher, makes a pair with Jeune dessinateur.
The original drawing of Jeune dessinateur,
formerly in the Francis Springell collection, was sold at Sotheby's London on
30 June 1986 (lot 85). It is drawn in red and black chalk with white highlights
and grey and blue washes. François Boucher himself made an etching after this
design (The Draughtsman, IFF 13). Beverly Schreiber Jacoby believes that
Boucher planned his drawing as a preparation for the etching, because the young
boy is holding his porte-crayon in his left hand in the drawing, and thus in
his right hand in the etching. Alan P. Wintermute adds that “Boucher often made drawings to be engraved
in reverse to offset the ‘mirror imaging’ inevitable in the standard
printmaking process.”
As for the model of the young artist, Alan P.
Wintermute explains that “The portrayal of young men as draughtsmen, often with
portfolios under their arms and brushes in hand, was a popular theme with
eighteenth century French artists”. He also adds that the theme is usually
thought to have originated with Chardin’s Young Student Drawing
which was exhibited at the 1738 Salon; according to Pierre Rosenberg, Chardin’s
drawing was made two to three years before that. A. P. Wintermute however is of
the opinion that “Boucher’s drawing certainly precedes that date and it appears
that it is he, rather than Chardin, who initiated the tradition.” Wintermute
gives as evidence a painting by Boucher dating back to the early 1730s, The
Landscape Painter (sincesold by Christie’s, 19 April 2018), in which there is
a young student holding a portfolio. As for the drawing of The Young
Draughtsman, Wintermute thinks it is of an earlier date, sometime between
1729-1732.
That Demarteau engraved it many years later
shows, according to Beverly Schreiber Jacoby, that Boucher had probably kept
the drawing.
Reference: Pierrette Jean-Richard, L’Œuvre gravé de François Boucher dans la collection Edmond de Rothschild, 1978; Léopold de Leymarie, L’Œuvre de Gilles Demarteau l’aîné, graveur du Roi, 1896; Beverly Schreiber Jacoby, François Boucher’s Early Development as a Draughtsman 1720-1734, 1986; Colin B. Bailey, Katherine M. Kraig, Regina Shoolman Slatkin [et al.]] François Boucher : 1703-1770 : his circle and influence, 1987.