THE LOIRE VALLEY, France—The “garden party” sales that Vendôme, France–based auctioneer
Philippe Rouillac holds each June at the 17th-century
Château de Cheverny, 100 miles southwest of Paris, have become a summer highlight on every French connoisseur’s social calendar. More than mere buzzy fetes, the auctions are important showcases for Loire Valley heirlooms. Past highlights have included
Charles Wilson Peale?s 1782 portrait of
George Washington, which sold for €5.2 million ($8.2 million) in 2002 and is now hanging in the dining-room corridor at the White House in Washington, D.C. This year’s sales, held June 6, 8 and 9, are likely to appeal once more to U.S. patriotism, with 100 lots from the archives of the
Comte de Rochambeau (1725–1807), the French general who helped Washington’s troops defeat the British in the Battle of Yorktown. Among the offerings are coded letters from Louis XV (€3,000–5,000; $4,700–7,900 each), and the bergère in which Rochambeau died (est. €60,000–80,000; $95,000–126,000). The sale also includes 75 late 18th-century French swords and sabers valued between €100,000 and €150,000 ($158–237,000); a cache of 250 17th-century French gold coins unearthed last year by a 22-year-old Portuguesemason in Montrichard, south of Vendôme (est. €100– 200,000); and a recentlydiscovered 10-foot-high lifesize drawing by the Neoclassical artist
Pierre- Paul Prud’hon. The picture depicts the silver, mother-of-pearl and lapis lazulimirror that the French silversmith
Jean-Baptiste Claude Odiot designed forthe city of Paris in honor of
Marie Louise of Austria?s marriage to
Napoléon, in 1810, and that the widowed, penniless empress had melted down in 1823. The drawing is expected to fetch between €10,000 and €15,000 ($15,800–23,700).
"Auction House" originally appeared in the June 2008 issue of Art+Auction. For a complete list of articles from this issue available on ARTINFO, see Art+Auction's June 2008 Table of Contents.