The Oyster Dinner
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| The Oyster Dinner | |
|---|---|
| Artist | Jean-François de Troy |
| Year | 1735 |
| Medium | oil on canvas |
| Dimensions | 180 cm × 126 cm (71 in × 50 in) |
| Location | Musée Condé, Chantilly |
The Oyster Dinner (French - Le Déjeuner d'huîtres) is a 1735 painting by Jean-François de Troy. It and Nicolas Lancret's The Ham Dinner were commissioned by Louis XV to decorate the dining room in the lesser apartments at the Palace of Versailles. It includes the first appearance of a champagne bottle in painting. Both paintings are now in the Musée Condé, in Chantilly.
This painting was commissioned by King Louis XV from the painter Jean-François de Troy, for the dining room of the small apartments of the Palace of Versailles, who produced it in 1735. At the same time, he produced two other paintings for the king's apartments : Le Déjeuner de Chasse (Musée du Louvre),[1] as well as a Deer at bay. For the first painting, the painter was only paid on January 20, 1738 by the sum of 2,400 pounds. In apartments, it was the counterpart to Nicolas Lancret's Déjeuner de Jamon. It was in place in 1737 and appears in the inventory of the royal collections at that date. But from 1768, the paintings left the apartments following their reorganization in office rooms and kitchens. In 1784, the paintings are present at the superintendence of the castle.[2]
During the Revolution, the painting was seized and sent to the Central Museum of Arts, ancestor of the Louvre Museum. During the Restoration, in 1817, Louis-Philippe I, then Duke of Orléans, claimed the work as well as its pendant because, according to him, they came, wrongly, from the collection of the Regent, his ancestor. He sends the two paintings, as well as Le Déjeuner de Chasse, recovered in the same way from his Château d'Eu. His son, the Duke of Aumale acquired it in 1857 during the sale of his father's collections in London. He obtains that the two pendants are withdrawn from sale: the Déjeuner d'huître is acquired for 3,000 francs. He installs them in his property of Orleans House in Twickenham. These paintings have a sentimental value for him: his father described to him the names of the characters represented here, even if art historians doubt today that they can represent characters who really existed. Returning to France in 1871, he exhibited it in the large gallery of his Château de Chantilly, currently owned by the Institut de France.[3]
The painting has undergone transformations: originally integrated into the woodwork, it was given a more regular form.[4] It finally underwent a complete cleaning in 2000, with the repair of uplifts and yellowing, as well as the removal of repaints in several places.[5]