…; collection Louis Philippe Joseph (1747-1793), Duc d’Orléans, Palais Royal, Paris, after 1788;{Inscription on an engraving by Jan-Louis Delignon (as J.B. Weenix), _La Gaieté Bachique_, 1808; illustrated in J. Couché, _Galerie du Palais Royal gravée d'après les tableaux des différentes écoles qui la composent […]: Dediée à S.A.S. Monseigneur le duc d’Orléans_, III, Paris 1808, unpag. For the period of acquisition see also the entry.} from whom, with the other Dutch and Flemish paintings in his collection, fr. 350,000, to Thomas Moore Slade, London, 1792/93;{W. Buchanan, _Memoirs of Painting: With a Chronological History of the Importation of Pictures by the Great Masters into England since the French Revolution_, I, London 1824, pp. 159-64; D. Sutton, ‘Aspects of British Collecting, III.XIII: The Orléans Collection’, _Apollo_ 119 (1984), pp. 357-72, esp. pp. 359-62.} his sale, London, Pall Mall (auction house not known), April 1793, no. 251, as J.B. Weenix (‘The debauch’);{GPI, Br-A5163.}…; ? sale, Auguste-Louis-César-Hipolite-Théodore de L’Espinasse de Langeac, Comte d’Arlet, Paris (Constantin), 4 January 1815 _sqq._, no. 204, as N. Knupfer (‘L’enfant prodigue avec ses maîtresses, ou peut-être un musico hollandaise, sur bois’);…; sale, William Wilkins (1778-1839, Cambridge), London (Christie’s), 22 May 1830, no. 2, as Jan Baptist Weenix (‘The Prodigal Son, or La Gaieté bacchique, as it was denominated when in the Orléans collection. An inscription on the back of the panel states it to have been one of the Tableaux reclamés de St. Cloud, from which palace it had been surreptitiously abstracted. Houbraken, in his Lives of the Painters, notices this picture as being one of the most celebrated of this master’), bought in at 40 gns;{Copy RKD. See the entry for the inscription referred to in this sale catalogue.}…; collection Count André Mniszech (1823-1905), Paris;{Note RMA. Not located in the catalogue for the sale, Countess André Mniszech, Paris (H. Baudoin, Hôtel Drouot), 10 May 1910.}…; collection Adolphe Schloss (c. 1842/43-1910) and his wife, Lucie Schloss (1858-1938), Paris; confiscated by the Nazis from their children, Château de Chambon, near Tulle, 1943; restituted to the Schloss family after World War II; their sale, Paris (Galerie Charpentier), 25 May 1949, no. 28, fr. 480,000;{Copy RMA. According to the catalogue for the sale, The Duke of Beaufort et al., London (Sotheby’s), 10 December 1980, no. 62, the painting was purchased at the 1949 sale by a member of the family who brought it into the 1980 sale.}…; private collection, Le Verviers, near Liège;{Note RMA.}…; sale, The Duke of Beaufort et al., London (Sotheby’s), 10 December 1980, no.18,000, to the dealer Hoogsteder; from whom purchased by the museum, as a gift from the Rijksmuseum-Stichting, 1981
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