TEFAF MAASTRICHT 2025
13 - 14 MARCH 2025 • PREVIEW
15 - 20 MARCH 2025 • GENERAL ACCESS
PAINTINGS • STAND 318
OUR HIGHLIGHTS
The Sultan’s Favourite: amid seduction and theatricality in the Harem
Francesco Hayez's newly rediscovered masterpiece, Interior of a Harem (1840), is an important addition to the catalogue of this great Italian artist, a protagonist of the Romanticism. In this striking painting, made for one of his major Austrian patrons, Countess Nákó of Vienna, Hayez takes us into a world of refined seduction and theatricality, with a subject that was very dear to him and very fashionable throughout Europe at the time. In the main group, the sultan is complacently gazing at a magnificent Western woman who has just joined the harem, whose youth and purity embody ideal beauty. Portrayed with a grace that expresses all of her femininity, the protagonist is Hayez’s favourite muse, who had already appeared in other iconic works by the artist such as Odalisca and Malinconia. Around her, other odalisques help to create a romantic and sensual atmosphere. The painting closes around an extraordinary scene, of a great scenic effect, framed by the painter between a rich curtain, a wooden backdrop typical of the Harem, and a softly blurred landscape on the horizon. The skilful use of perspective and the contrast between light and shadow add depth and magic to the scene. Painted at the height of Hayez's success, this work is a refined example of 19th-century Orientalism in its ability to enhance female beauty in all its nuances and to depict the sumptuousness of costume with almost miniaturist precision.
Francesco Hayez (Venice 1791 – Milan 1882)
Interior of a Harem, 1840
Oil on canvas, 84 x 108 cm
Signed lower right
Provenance: Countess Nákó of Vienna; private collection.
de László: portrait of a ‘modern’ woman of the Roaring Twenties.

Philip Alexius de LÁSZLÓ (Budapest 1869 – London 1937)
Portrait of the singer Germaine Gien, 1921
Oil on canvas, 73.3 x 54.5 cm
Signed, dated and dedicated lower right: de László / Paris 1921 Xbre / a mon ami Belugou
Provenance: From the private collection of Germaine Gien (1895-1989) and Léon Bélugou (1865-1934); private collection.
Literature: Programme of Germaine Gien’s recital at the de László’s house in London, “At Home”. Mrs. De Laszlo, reproduced on the cover.

Literature: Antonio Mancini. Catalogo ragionato dell’opera. La pittura a olio, pag. 286, n.443 (dated 1895)
Carlo FINELLI (Carrara 1782 – Rome 1853)
The Three Graces
Carrara marble, 158 x 119 x 67 cm
Provenance: The artist to 1853; upon Finelli’s death to Filippo Massani; then by descent to his daughter Anna Massani Camuccini and her husband Giambattista Camuccini, Palazzo Camuccini, Cantalupo in Sabina Italy; then by descent in the Camuccini family to the collection of Baron Vincenzo Camuccini.
Exhibition: Equilibrium, by Stefania Ricci and Sergio Risaliti, Florence, Museo Salvatore Ferragamo, 19 June 2014 - 12 April 2015, p. 114; DOPO CANOVA: Percorsi della scultura a Firenze e Roma, curated by Sergej Androsov, Massimo Bertozzi and Ettore Spalletti, Cucchiari, Carrara, 8 July - 22 October 2017.