Frans Masereel (1889–1972)
"Hafenarbeiter"
[Longshoremen/Stevedores], 1964, from "Das Gesicht Hamburgs"
Woodcut on
handmade paper, pencil signed by the artist and signed with initials in the
plate
Size: (sheet)
24.3 x 16 cm; (plate) 12.9 x 10.7 cm
Condition:
Strong impression signed by the artist in pencil, in pristine condition with
blank verso.
I am selling
this original woodcut by one of the most important graphic novel (i.e. wordless
book) illustrators for AU$135 in total (currently US$98.28/EUR86.90/GBP68.42 at
the time of posting this print) including postage and handling to anywhere in
the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this visually arresting print—a truly superb
example—please contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you
a PayPal invoice to make the payment easy.
Masereel's
woodcut prints are not designed to charm viewers with finely rendered details
or dazzling technical effects. Instead, his prints are all about visual
communication with as few chiselled strokes as are necessary.
Although this
assessment may suggest that Masereel's prints are therefore crude in concept
and execution this is far from the truth; in fact, the converse is true.
Masereel's prints are made with a clear eye to the essential pictorial elements
needed to express his dark vision of the world. Moreover, the technical
knowledge involved in the execution of his prints is likewise highly tuned to
the sole purpose of projecting meaning.
In this print, for instance, Masereel
portrays smoke rising from the tugboat, shown towards the centre of the image,
as a complex of curving lines angled to match the angles of the crane hooks
suspended above. Regarding his treatment of water, he uses both positive lines
(i.e. black lines) when the ripples are in the light and negative lines (i.e.
white lines) when the ripples are in shadows.
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