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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: The Countess of Castiglione in collaboration with Pierre-Louis Pierson, La Comtesse Castiglione - Scherzo di Follia , 1930

The Countess of Castiglione in collaboration with Pierre-Louis Pierson

La Comtesse Castiglione - Scherzo di Follia , 1930
Toned gelatin silver print
40 x 30 cms
15 11/16 x 11 12/16 ins
12071
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1863-66, printed c.1930. Rare enlarged version. A very rare print of one of the most famous pictures of the Countess of Castiglione and an icon of photographic history. A directly...
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1863-66, printed c.1930. Rare enlarged version.

A very rare print of one of the most famous pictures of the Countess of Castiglione and an icon of photographic history.

A directly comparable enlarged print is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum in New York. Both versions were printed from the original glass plate by the Braun factory in the 1930's. By then the original glass plate had become damaged, leading to the curious cracking which adds to the presence of the image. The image is the enlarged upper section of a small carte de visit. The purpose of the enlargement is not known.

The Met.cataloguing records the following:

A rare original print from the same negative is preserved in a private collection (see La Divine Comtesse cat. no. 78, p. 183, ill. p. 148). The negative is preserved in the Mayer & Pierson archive (10/100), and the title comes from the Countess, likely after Verdi's Un ballo in maschera (premiered February 17, 1859, at the Teatro Apollo in Rome, and in Paris on January 13, 1861); Pierre Appraxine has suggested that this enlargement may come from the 1930s, due to its style of cropping and print quality.

Virginia Oldoini (1837-1899), born to an aristocratic family from La Spezia, entered into an arranged and loveless marriage at age seventeen to Count Francesco Verasis di Castiglione. Widely considered to be the most beautiful woman of her day, the countess was sent to Paris in 1856 to bolster the interest of Napoleon III in the cause of Italian unification. She was instructed by her cousin, the minister Camillo Cavour, to succeed by whatever means you wish-but succeed! She caused a sensation at the French court and quickly-if briefly-became the emperor's mistress. Separated from the husband she had bankrupted by her extravagances, she retreated to Italy in self-imposed exile in 1858. She returned to Paris in 1861, however, and once more became a glamorous and influential fixture of Parisian society, forming numerous liaisons with notable aristocrats, financiers, and politicians, while cultivating an image of a mysterious femme fatale.

In July 1856, the countess made her first visit to the studio of Mayer & Pierson, one of the most sought-after portrait studios of the Second Empire. Her meeting with Pierre-Louis Pierson led to a collaboration that would produce more than 400 portraits concentrated into three distinct periods-her triumphal entry into French society, 1856-57; her reentry into Parisian life, from 1861 to 1867; and toward the end of her life, from 1893 to 1895.

Fascinated by her own beauty, the countess would attempt to capture all its facets and re-create for the camera the defining moments of her life. Far from being merely a passive subject, it was she who decided the expressive content of the images and assumed the art director's role, even to the point of choosing the camera angle. She also gave precise directions on the enlargement and repainting of her images in order to transform the simple photographic documents into imaginary visions-taking up the paintbrush herself at times. Her painted photographs are among the most beautiful examples of the genre.

While many of the portraits record the countess' triumphant moments in Parisian society, wearing the extravagant gowns and costumes in which she appeared at soirées and masked balls, in others she assumes roles drawn from the theater, opera, literature, and her own imagination. Functioning as a means of self-advertisement as well as self-expression, they show the countess, by turns, as a mysterious seductress, a virginal innocent, and a charming coquette. Provided with titles of her own choosing, and often elaborately painted under her direction, these images were frequently sent to lovers and admirers as tokens of her favor. Unique in the annals of nineteenth-century photography, these works have been seen as forerunners to the self-portrait photography of later artists such as Claude Cahun, Pierre Molinier, and Cindy Sherman.

Pierson's earliest photograph of the countess, The Black Dress (Martini di Cigala Collection, San Giusto a Rentennano, Siena), dates from 1856, a few months after her arrival in Paris, and shows her demurely posed before the camera, wearing a black velvet evening gown with her hair in ringlets. Soon, however, the images began to take on the elements of fantasy and personal display that would become hallmarks of her collaboration with Pierson. In a photograph of 1856-57, for example, she appears pale and solemn in the white garb of a nun. In The Queen of Hearts

(1861-63; Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Paris), re-creating her appearance at a masked ball, she is a personification of love in a voluminous gown and veil festooned with roses and hearts. In The Queen of Etruria (1863; private collection), also reprising one of her costumes for a ball, she is an exotic and imperious ruler from antiquity.

After the fall of the Second Empire in 1870, the countess lived an increasingly reclusive and eccentric life in an apartment on the Place Vend, venturing out only at night, shrouded in veils. Toward the end of her life, following a hiatus of some twenty-five years, the Countess di Castiglione resumed her sessions with Pierson. The pictures reveal her mental instability and loss of all critical sense. Conscious of the earlier work she had accomplished with Pierson, she dreamed of showing their oeuvre at the Exposition Universelle of 1900 in a retrospective titled The Most Beautiful Woman of the Century. This was not to be. The Countess di Castiglione died on November 28, 1899, at the age of sixty-two.

Following her death, her reputation as a woman of mystery and divine beauty endured, thanks in large part to the legacy of her photographic oeuvre. Among the aesthetes of fin-de-siècle Paris, her life was the subject of admiring and often obsessive curiosity. Prominent among them was Robert de Montesquiou, who spent thirteen years writing her biography, La Divine Comtesse (published in 1913), and who assembled a large collection of her photographs, 275 of which were acquired by the Metropolitan Museum in 1975. Her life has also been the subject of numerous subsequent biographies and a 1955 film, La Castiglione, starring Yvonne De Carlo.

Malcolm Daniel, Department of Photographs, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, July 2007.
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Provenance

Braun manufactory, France
Private collection, France
Private collection, USA

Literature

La Divine Comtesse cat. no. 78, p. 183, ill. p. 148
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