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Image

RISDM 1991-008.tif
  • RISDM 1991-008.tif

Rockwell Kent

Study of Paquette

Description

Maker

Rockwell Kent (American, 1882-1971)

Title

Study of Paquette
from *Candide* by Voltaire, Hanover House edition

Year

1959

Medium

  • pen and ink,
  • pencil,
  • watercolor,
  • conte crayon

Materials/Techniques

Techniques

  • pen and ink,
  • pencil,
  • watercolor,
  • conte crayon

Materials

watercolor, chalk, pen and ink

Supports

  • paper

Dimensions

15.9 x 20.6 cm (6 1/4 x 8 1/8 inches)

Credit / Object Number

Credit

Museum purchase: Gift of Nancy Angier

Object Number

1991.008

Type

  • Drawings and Watercolors

Exhibition History

Exhibition History

Draw Me a Story
Illustration from the Permanent Collection
Apr 14, 2006 – Jul 23, 2006

Label copy

When the publishing firm Random House commissioned Rockwell Kent to draw illustrations for an edition of Voltaire’s Candide in 1927, Kent was already an established painter and illustrator to fashionable magazines such as Vanity Fair. This sketch was a design for a drawing of a Paquette, a servant-girl-turned-prostitute who imposes her story of misfortune upon the protagonist of Voltaire’s satiric novel Candide, 1759. The drawing is captioned “…obliged to continue the abominable occupation….” The corresponding illustration did not, however, appear in the 1928 edition of the book, but only in the 1959 re-publication of the story. It was one of four full-page illustrations highlighted with the umber brown colors with which Kent experimented on the left of his drawing.

Joseph Lindon Smith and His Circle in Dublin, New Hampshire
Oct 14, 1998 – Mar 03, 1999

Label copy

Rockwell Kent belongs to a second generation of artists who came to Dublin. Apprenticed to Abbot Thayer, Kent arrived in Dublin towards the end of a long artistic training, first under William Merritt Chase and then Robert Henri. In the process, he worked as an architectural draftsman, illustrator, printmaker, painter, ship's carpenter, and dairy farmer. During a long career, he worked in Maine, Newfoundland, Alaska, Greenland, and the Adirondacks. Only a few paintings of Dublin by Kent are known.

These two drawings suggest the breadth of Kent's artistic interests. Little is known of his designs for modem cutlery, or whether this flatware pattern was ever produced. The watercolor drawings have been recently identified as a study for an illustration for a 1959 edition of Candide, the satirical tale first published by Voltaire in 1759.

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Tombstone

Rockwell Kent (American, 1882-1971)
Study of Paquette; from *Candide* by Voltaire, Hanover House edition, 1959
Pen and ink, pencil, watercolor, conte crayon
15.9 x 20.6 cm (6 1/4 x 8 1/8 inches)
Museum purchase: Gift of Nancy Angier 1991.008

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We view our online collection as a living documents, and our records are frequently revised and enhanced. If you have additional information or have spotted an error, please send feedback to curatorial@risd.edu.

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