Study for "Young and His Daughter"

Pierre Antoine Augustin Vafflard French

Not on view

In 1736 the English poet and playwright Edward Young was traveling through France with his family when his stepdaughter, Elizabeth Temple, died at Lyons. Forbidden to inter her remains in the city’s Catholic cemetery because of their religion, he was obliged to seek out the Protestant burial ground in the middle of the night. His romantic and indelibly macabre poem relating the story, The Complaint, or Night-Thoughts on Life, Death, and Immortality (1742–45), was especially popular during the period of the French Revolution.
This is a study for a painting Vafflard exhibited at the Salon of 1804 (Musée des Beaux-Arts, Angoulême).

Study for "Young and His Daughter", Pierre Antoine Augustin Vafflard (French, Paris 1777–1837 Paris), Oil on paper, laid down on canvas

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