Vicomte Ludovic-Napoléon Lepic (aka Ludovic Napoléon Lepic; Ludovic Lepic) (1839–89)
“Intérieur
d’étable” (inside barn), 1869
Etching with
roulette on fine laid paper with margins, proof before lettering.
Size: (sheet)
23.1 x 33.9 cm; (plate) 17.9 x 24.7 cm
Condition: exceptionally
rare proof before lettering. The impression is richly inked and well printed
and the sheet is in excellent condition (i.e. there are no stains, tears,
abrasions, holes, losses or foxing).
I am selling
this early and rare proof impression by Lepic—a close friend of Degas and, like
Degas, an artist famous his exploratory use of printing techniques—for the
total cost of [deleted] including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this very beautifully executed etching by one of the
famous master printmakers of the nineteenth century, please contact me
(oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make
the payment easy.
This print has been sold
This is an
early etching by Lepic and an exceptionally rare one, as it is a proof before
lettering with publication details. In many ways this seemingly simple
portrayal of a child feeding a cow and its calf in a barn reveals elements of the
creative invention that ultimately made Lepic one of the famous French
printmakers. For example, note how Lepic casts an almost theatrical spotlight upon
the scene so that the lower half of the child is in shadow along with the rest
of the interior of the barn. Note also how he fades the shadows using the
compositional device of the vignette to connote the periphery of the scene and
employs the marks of a dot roulette to give visual richness to the shadows.
Regarding Lepic’s
explorations that cemented his fame, Michel Melot (1966) in “The Impressionist
Print” proposes that Lepic would “have been forgotten as a printmaker had he
not published in 1876 a curious album of prints … ‘L’eau-forte mobile’ (‘The
Mobile Etching’)” (p. 123). The ingredient that aroused public interest in
Lepic was his willingness to push the boundaries of the medium. For example,
Lepic inked one of his etched plates in eighty-five different ways to create
eighty-five very different images taken from the same original plate. In Lepic’s
own words (translated from French):
“I organised
tools of my own, used neat acid, slammed on varnish, sand clay—anything to
achieve the right black. … I shall make prints like a painter, not like a
printmaker.” (Melot p.123)
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