Armand Cassagne (aka Armand-Théophile Cassagne) (1823–1907)
"Étude de
Saule" [willow study], 1862, from "Le Dessin pour tous. (Méthode
Cassagne.) Troisième série. Étude de la figure par divers artistes.
Première partie-éléments. Fr. & Eng." printed by Lemercier.
Lithograph on
thick wove paper
Size: (sheet)
49.5 x 34.1 cm, (image borderline) 37.6 X 25.8 cm.
Inscribed above
the upper borderline (centre): "LE DESSIN POUR TOUS MÉTHODE CASSAGNE /
3me. Partie / LE DESSIN D'APRÈS NATURE."; signed within the image by the
artist and dated 1862; inscribed below the lower borderline: (left)
"Librairire Classique de CH. Fouraut rue St. Andrél-des-Arts 47.";
(centre) "4 / ÉTUDE DE SAULE"; (right) "Imp. Lemercier rue de
Seine 57 Paris."
Condition:
marvellous impression in near pristine condition with only a few small dots
upper left.
I am selling
this image of two willow trees seemingly engaged in a dramatic struggle for
the total cost of AU$223 (currently US$149.93/EUR135.29/GBP114.07 at the time
of this listing) including Express Mail (EMS) postage and handling to anywhere
in the world, but not (of course) any import duties/taxes imposed by some
countries. Note that payment is in Australian dollars (AU$223) as this is my
currency.
If you are
interested in purchasing this superb and visually arresting lithograph, please
contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal
invoice to make the payment easy.
This visually
arresting study of willow trees was designed to be an illustration of natural
forms that art students could copy to improve their drawing skills. It featured
in a two-volume publication along with 107 other lithographs, all of which were
arranged so that they could be copied in the blank spaces provided.
Cassagne's
choice of this particular subject—a highly romanticised and dramatic, animistic
vision of inner life within trees is not surprising as he worked in the
Fontainebleau forest from 1857 to 1868 and conducted public drawing classes
there. Indeed, Cassagne was so captivated by the magic of the Fontainebleau
forest that he donated a large collection of his drawings and paintings of it
to the Musée de Melum in order to create, in his own words: "the
apotheosis of the forest of Fontainebleau."
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