The Dead Roe

Jean-Baptiste Oudry (1686–1755)

“The Dead Roe” by Jean-Baptiste Oudry in the back state room of The Wallace Collection, Marylebone, London, England

From The Wallace Collection website:

The painting is a brilliant example of the more ambitious buffets Desportes began to paint at the end of Louis XIV’s reign. Desportes followed the Flemish still-life tradition that was popular in Paris and that he absorbed from his teacher Bernaerts but developed a harmonious colour scheme and more dramatic compositions. The fragment of a capital in the composite order indicates that the painting was intended for a high-ranking patron. From Bonnier de la Mosson’s collection, the painting is recorded with its pendant P594: Both pendants were probably meant to hang on the same wall as the light comes from the left in both cases. The first known owner, Joseph Binner de la Mosson, had built up an important collection on natural history.

Object description
Type: Easel painting
Location: The Wallace Collection, London
Material: Oil on canvas
Artist: Jean-Baptiste Oudry (1686–1755)
Date: about 1721

Image details
Date: 8 December 2025
Camera body: iPhone Xs
Lens: Wide Camera 26mm ƒ/1.8
Focal Length: 26mm
Aperture: ƒ/1.8
Shutter Speed: 1/25s
ISO: 640
Licensing: Image of a Wallace Collection asset. This image cannot be licensed.