Monday, 6 July 2026

Marc Louis Emmanuel Solon, “Porcelaine avec Pâtes Rapportées”, 1865


Marc Louis Emmanuel Solon (pseudonym: Miles) (1835–1913)— Note that this etching is signed in the plate at the lower centre with the artist’s monogram: “MLS / sculp”.

“Porcelaine avec Pâtes Rapportées” (Porcelain with Added Pastes), 1865 — The title refers to porcelain decorated with relief using the “pâte-sur-pâte” (paste-on-paste) method, for which Marc Louis Emmanuel Solon was a leading exponent.

Technical Details & Condition:

Etching on buff-coloured chine-collé on wove paper trimmed within the platemark with small margins around the image and professionally backed with a support sheet, providing wide margins.

Printed by Alfred Salmon (active 1863-1894) in Paris and published in the art review, “Gazette des Beaux-Arts”, in October 1865, as Plate 17 between pages 374 and 375. The in-plate lettering notes that the composition was designed by “Mr. Milès”— Solon’s pseudonym—and indicates that the porcelain piece was fabricated by “Mr. Rousseau” (François-Eugène Rousseau, 1827–1891) Solon’s financial backer and dealer.

The impression is strong, crisp, and evenly printed. Aside from a minor mark in the support sheet margin at the left, the sheet is in excellent condition—free of tears, holes, folds, abrasions, or significant stains.

Dimensions:

• Sheet: 18.3 x 23.2 cm
• Chine collé: 15.4 x 21.7 cm

In-Plate Lettering:

• Following the oval edge: (lower left) “COMPOSITION DE MR. MILÈS”
• Within the oval: (lower centre) “MLS [monogram of artist] / sculp”
• Following the oval edge: (lower right) “FABRICATION DE MR. ROUSSEAU.”
• Below the chine collé: (left) “Gazette des Beaux-Arts”

• Below the chine collé: (centre) “PORCELAINE AVEC PÂTES RAPPORTÉES.”
• Below the chine collé: (right) “Imp. A. Salmon à Paris.”

Price & Shipping:

AU$228 (approximately US$158.11 / €138.29 / £118.52), including worldwide express shipping. Please note: Import duties and taxes are the buyer’s responsibility.

If you are interested in acquiring this exquisite etching by a key porcelain artist, exemplifying his early mastery of flowing lines leading into the Art Nouveau period (peaking between 1895 and 1905), please contact oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com. I am happy to provide a secure PayPal invoice for a seamless purchase.















Saturday, 4 July 2026

Bernard Picart, “Hell”, 1730, after Abraham van Diepenbeeck

Workshop of Bernard Picart (1673–1733)

“Hell” (also known as “Les Enfers”), 1730

Technical Details & Condition:

Etching with engraving, printed from two plates on laid paper, with full margins as issued. Plate LV (55) to the series of sixty plates, “Le Temple des Muses”, published in 1733 in the first French edition by Zacharias Chatelain (active 1705–1733) in Amsterdam.

Archive.org offers an online view of this print in its context in the publication, facing page 138: https://archive.org/details/gri_33125012263162/page/n257/mode/2up.

The Curator of the British Museum notes: “Each illustration comes with an ornate border. There are at least 14 types of border, each printed once from the same plate as the illustration they first frame, then re-used as a passe-partout for the other illustrations” (https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/P_1878-0914-53).

The composition of the central scene is based on an original design by Abraham van Diepenbeeck (1596–1675) and follows a reverse composition executed collaboratively by Cornelis Bloemaert (1603–1692) and Theodor Matham (1605/6–1676), with Matham completing the background. (See previous listing: https://www.printsandprinciples.com/2016/11/cornelis-bloemaerts-engraving-les.html.) 

The outer frame plate is inscribed at the lower left: “B. Picart del. 1730”, indicating Bernard Picart designed and drew the decorative border. His role for the inner scene is recorded as “B. Picart direx”, showing he directed the workshop’s re-engraving of the older composition.

The impression is strong, exhibiting minimal signs of wear to the printing plate—indicative of an early impression. Aside from minor surface marks, the sheet is in excellent condition—free of tears, holes, folds, abrasions, or significant stains.

Dimensions:

• Sheet: 46.1 x 27.8 cm
• Platemark: 35.4 x 25.4 cm

• Inner image borderline: 23.5 x 18.1 cm

In-Plate Lettering:

• Below the central image: (left) “B. Picart direx”; (centre) “LES ENFERS. / HELL. // Die hell. / De Helle.”
• Below the outer frame: (left) “B. Picart del. 1730.”

Price & Shipping:

AU$302 (approximately US$209.68 / €183.28 / £157.06), including worldwide express shipping. Please note: Import duties and taxes are the buyer’s responsibility.

If you are interested in acquiring this simply fabulous etching (with engraving), depicting a view of Hell, printed from two plates, please contact oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com. I am happy to provide a secure PayPal invoice for a seamless purchase.

This print has been sold


















Matthaeus Merian, “Patagonian Succarath & Mythic Beasts”, 1655


Matthaeus Merian (also known as Matthäus Merian I) (1593–1650), or possibly Theodoor de Bry (aka Théodore de Bry, Dietrich de Bry, and Dirk de Bry) (1528–1598)

“Patagonian Succarath & Mythic Beasts”, 1655

Depicted Animals based on early Spanish colonial descriptions of real South American wildlife with legendary creatures invented or misunderstood by early European mapmakers:

The Succarath / Su (lower-left): a legendary monster of Patagonia described as having a human-like face, wolfish body, backwards-curving horns, and a massive, palm-like tail. Legend held that it carried its young on its back and would destroy them if hunted rather than let them be captured.
The Manticore-like Beast / Patagonian Lioness (lower-right): A large, bear-headed predator with humanised facial features shown nursing two cubs, blending Renaissance bestiary style with early explorer descriptions of South American pumas.
The Patagonian Unicorn (in the distance at upper-right): A slender, long-necked beast with a single spiralling horn on its head. It is seen standing on the hill below the smoking volcano.
The Giant Crocodile / Caiman (upper-centre): A massive, armour-skinned crocodilian.
The Jaguar / Ocelot (centre-right): Two predatory wild cats representing South America's native felines, depicted with classic heraldic, lion-like features popular in 17th-century European art.
The Armadillo (below and closest to the crocodile): A banded armadillo foraging.
The Anteater / Coati (at centre below the armadillo and behind the lizards): A long-nosed mammal
Large Ground Iguana / Lizard (lower-centre): A spiked reptile resting near a twisted snake.
The Giant Constrictor Snakes (foreground): Interlocking, coiled serpents representing the terrifyingly large snakes described by early explorers in the tropical swamps.

Technical Details & Condition:

Etching on fine laid paper with full margins and German letterpress text on both recto and verso. This original book-leaf was published in Frankfurt am Main in 1655 by the Merian heirs, as part of Johann Ludwig Gottfried’s “Newe Welt und Americanische Historien.” The featured etching appears on page 614. See: https://archive.org/details/neweweltvndameri00gott/page/614/mode/2up.

The impression is strong, showing minimal signs of wear to the printing plate, indicative of an early impression. Aside from minor age-toning and a few surface marks, the sheet is in excellent condition—free of tears, holes, folds, abrasions, or significant stains.

Dimensions:

• Sheet: 30.7 x 19.3 cm
• Platemark: 15.5 x 18 cm

• Image borderline: 15 x 17.3 cm

Letterpress text (recto):

• Above image: (left) “614”; (centre) “West Indianischer Historien” (Translation: “West Indian histories”)
• Main text paragraph directly below image begins: “In der Insul ein grob steinern Bild gefunden / wie ein Weib gestaltet / ...” (Translation: “On the island a large stone image [statue] was found, shaped like a woman...”)

Summary of Topics Covered in the Text:

Indigenous Idols & Spanish Conquest: Discusses the discovery of a large stone statue of a woman on an island. It notes that the indigenous people made offerings to it, but when the Spanish overthrew it without facing divine retribution, the locals realised they had been deceived by a false idol.
Volcanic Activity in El Salvador: Details a massive, active volcano in the province of San Salvador with a crater deep enough to walk down into, warning of deadly, fainting-inducing sulphur smoke venting from lime-kiln-like fissures.
The Destruction of Nicaragua: Mentions a devastating volcanic eruption in Nicaragua that completely collapsed a mountainside, burying and destroying the homes of the native inhabitants in the valley below.
Natural Wonders & Unique Waters: Chronicles unusual geological anomalies, including a toxic night-flowing stream near the village of Nixapa, a river in Choluteca that vanishes entirely by afternoon, and a pair of springs in Mimilla where one runs boiling hot and the other ice cold.
The Secret to Native Ink: Describes the volcano of Nicaragua near the capital of Leon, noting that mixing its volcanic earth with the juice of a local fruit called Nacolo produces an exceptionally high-quality black writing ink.

Price & Shipping:

AU$279 (approximately US$193.71 / €169.32 / £145.10), including worldwide express shipping. Please note: Import duties and taxes are the buyer’s responsibility.

If you are interested in acquiring this historically significant 17th-century leaf capturing European imagination of South American animals and landscapes—please contact oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com. I am happy to provide a secure PayPal invoice for a seamless purchase.

This print has been sold 













Friday, 3 July 2026

Jules Héreau, “Un Maréchal Ferrant”, 1863

Jules Héreau (1839–1879)

“Un Maréchal Ferrant” (A Farrier), 1863

Technical Details & Condition:

Etching with drypoint on fine laid paper with generously wide margins as issued. Plate 79 from the second volume of Eaux-fortes modernes, produced by the Société des Aquafortistes (Society of Etchers, active 1862–1867). It was published and printed in Paris by Cadart & Luquet (Alfred Cadart and Jules Luquet).

The impression is richly inked with strong contrasts and is structurally faultless. The sheet is in near-pristine condition—free of tears, holes, folds, abrasions, significant stains, or handling marks.

Dimensions:

• Sheet: 31.9 x 44.1 cm
• Platemark: 23.8 x 31.9 cm

• Image borderline: 15 x 19.5 cm

In-Plate Lettering:

• Above the image at right: “79.”
• Within the image at lower left: “J. H 63”

Below the image at left: “J. Héreau sculp.t
• Below the image at centre:
UN MARÉCHAL FERRANT. / Paris, Publié par A. CADART & LUQUET, Editeurs, 79, Rue Richelieu.”  
• Below the image at right: “Imp. Delâtre, Rue St. Jacuqes, 303, Paris.”

References:

• IFF 1 (Jean Adhémar, et al., “Inventaire du Fonds Français après 1800: GUILLAUME–HUMBERT”, vol. 10, Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale de France, 1958, p. 297, cat. no. 1) IFF 1—https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k5489209c/f309.item
British Museum: Museum No. 1864,1008.289 (Note: The British Museum archives translate the title as “A Blacksmith”)—https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/P_1864-1008-289

Price & Shipping:

AU$238 (approximately US$165.24 / €144.34 / £123.64), including worldwide express shipping. Import duties and taxes (if any) are the buyer’s responsibility.

To acquire this intimate glimpse into the rhythmic, everyday workspace of a French farrier's shop during the mid-nineteenth century—note the watchful black dog sitting to the left, a traditional woven wicker basket on the floor alongside a dropped horseshoe, and the thick, acrid plume of smoke rising as two men set a hot shoe to the hoof—please contact oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com. Secure payment is handled via PayPal invoice for a smooth, protected transaction.