Probably produced between 1856 and 1857, at the beginning of the years of apprenticeship of Paul Cézanne (1839-1906), the work consists of two drawings.

On the front, the one made by the precursor of Post-Impressionism, in pen, brown ink and pencil, representing a soldier holding a small bottle and facing an old lady, barefoot, holding a vial in her right hand.

The back features a landscape with Calvary, made by Marie Cézanne, the artist's younger sister.

"It's a wonderful rediscovery. This drawing passed through the hands of the son and then the grandson of Cézanne before we lost track of it for almost sixty years", explained to AFP Thierry Collet, the Reims auctioneer responsible for the sale of the drawing, originally estimated between 20,000 and 30,000 euros.

Although it included a note inscribed by Jean-Pierre Cézanne, the painter's grandson, indicating that "the drawing opposite was an original drawing by (his) grandfather", it was still necessary more than two years of expert research to authenticate the double-sided drawing as belonging to the so-called "Jerusalem" notebook.

"This 24-page youth notebook featured early drawings by Paul Cézanne. Six, including the one we sold today, were detached, the other 18 were sold by the grandson to an American collector who has then donated to the Israel Museum in Jerusalem," Collet said.

Of rare value, the drawing sold on Sunday is a new clue, he explains, to the first inspirations of the painter from Aix-en-Provence, in this case the works of the old masters (a term designating the European artists who practiced their art between the years 1400 and 1700).

© 2022 AFP