Four anatomical
studies (viz. nose, mouth, eye and ear) from “The School of Art”, published by
Carington and John Bowles and Robert Sayer, London, 1765
Crayon-manner,
soft-ground stipple etchings printed in sanguine colour on soft laid paper
Size of each
print: (sheet) 43.5 x 27.3 cm; (plate) 33.3 x 23.1 cm
Condition:
strong impressions with wide margins (as published). The margins show signs of
significant handling (i.e. bumped, chipped and folded edges with some losses,
tears, stains and general dustiness) but the plate areas (i.e. the images) are
in good condition.
I am selling
these four 18th century etchings originally used for art students to study and
copy for AU$118 in total (currently US$85.80/EUR76.11/GBP59.40 at the time of
posting this listing) including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are interested in purchasing this set of early anatomical studies from
1765, please contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a
PayPal invoice to make the payment easy.
Drawings
translated into prints such as these are the fundamental instructional fodder
that past generations of art students were obliged to study and copy.
Invariably they had pin holes in their corners and displayed flicks and
spatters of ink and other less romantic stains that attest to their use in the
studio. Fortunately, these particular prints are almost free from such calamities.
Nevertheless, close inspection will reveal a few spatters on their backs that
stand as testimony to student endeavours to copy the master’s drawings.
Although I
believe strongly that copying old master drawings offers profound insights into
how figures move by giving graphic examples of how muscles and bones exert
pressures that push and pull on a figure’s body, from a pedagogical standpoint,
this teaching model may not be so relevant in the present digital age. After
all, I can understand the argument—even if I don’t completely agree with
it—that today’s art students can explore the figure in a 3D-virtual world, where
the idea of relying on a fixed template of set facial expressions may seem very
limited.
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