Adolphe
Appian (also known as Jacques Barthélemy
Appian) (1818–1898)
“Avant la Pluie, Village de
Villeneuve” (Before the Rain, Village of
Villeneuve), 1869
Technical Details &
Condition:
Etching on tissue-thin
buff-coloured Japanese laid paper, with generously wide margins. It is an
exceptionally rare proof-state impression before lettering for publication. The
sheet bears a pencil inscription by an unknown hand along the lower edge
(recto) providing details of the title and artist.
The impression is strong and
well-printed—a flawless proof! Aside from the pencil inscription, the sheet is
in pristine condition, free of tears, holes, folds, abrasions, stains, or
handling marks..
Dimensions:
• Sheet (slightly uneven): 28.9 x 39.8 cm
• Platemark (soft): 16 x 22.8 cm
• Image borderline: 12.3 x 21.1 cm
In-Plate Lettering:
• Upper left corner: “APPIA[N]
1889”
References:
• Curtis & Prouté 28 i (Atherton
Cutiis & Paul Prouté, “Adolphe Appian son Oeuvre Gravé et Lithographié”,
1968, Paris, Paul Prouté, [n.p.] cat. no. 28 i)
• Jennings 25 (Herbert H Jennings, Adolphe Appian (essay) in “Print Collector’s
Quarterly,” vol. 12, 1925, no. 1, p. 115, cat. no. 25)—see https://digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/diglit/print_collectors_quarterly1925/0134/scroll
(scroll to find the page 115)
Philip Gilbert Hamerton’s
insight:
In Hamerton’s 1876 edition of
“Etching and Etchers”, he offers the following insights about Appian’s
work:“…his [Appian’s] work is that each plate, however large or however small
it may be, is conceived from the first as a whole, and the first conception is
never departed from for the disproportionate realisation of some obtrusive
detail.” Further: “…Appian sees always in masses, and gives quite as much
detail as is consistent with the preservation of the mass” (pp. 202–03)
Price & Shipping:
AU$316
(approximately US$221.32 / €193.19 / £167.59), including worldwide express
shipping. Import duties and taxes (if any) are the buyer’s responsibility.
To acquire this exceptionally rare and
beautiful proof-state impression by an artist with a strong personal vision of
his surroundings and a close connection with the Barbizon School, please
contact oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com. Secure payment is handled via PayPal
invoice for a smooth, protected transaction.
This print has been sold

















































