Monochrome paintings by Sophie La Rosière, consisting of black encaustic on salvaged wooden panels and doors. It was later found that there were other oil paintings under this layer.
Two of these panels, initially believed to be works of modern art, were bought by Toronto collectors Samara Walbohm and Joe Shlesinger in the 1980s at a brocante in Saint-Germain-des-Prés (Paris). Later, similar objects were found in Rosière’s abandoned studio and in the Lesouëf library - a place adjacent to the retirement home for artists in Nogent-sur-Marne, France, where Sophie La Rosière died in 1948 and where artworks belonging to former residents are occasionally stored. (These objects sometimes stay there indefinitely, if not retrieved by family members after their owner dies).
Two works were found wrapped in old linen, instead of given encaustic layers.
One painting was found hidden in the back of a mirror (SLR 214).
After doing exploratory x-rays, it was discovered that iconography of an erotic nature done in oil paints is hidden underneath the black encaustic paint. These works can be dated to around 1917.
All these works are catalogued and and have been given inventory numbers.
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