(Pierre) Paul-Adrien
Bouroux (1878–1967)
(left image) "Ruins at Damman", 28th July, 1918
(right image) "La Halle d'Ypres,Belgium", 9th
August 1918
From "De la Mer aux Vosges", Geneva, 1921.
Etching (with drypoint?) in sepia ink on wove paper, in an
edition of 300
Size: (sheet) 27.8 x 22.4/27.3 x 22 cm; (plate) 21.7 x 16.8./21.3
x 16.2cm.
Inscribed in the plate (lower edge) with the artist's
signature, title and date.
Condition: richly inked impressions with plate tone and
margins in pristine condition.
I am selling this pair of prints by Paul-Adrien Bouroux for
AU$135 (currently US$97.44/EUR86.83/GBP67.16 at the time of posting these
prints) including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are interested in purchasing these visually arresting
etchings of ruins from WW1, please contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com)
and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make the payment easy.
The First World
War must have been a dreadful time for artist-illustrators like Bouroux and
these richly inked etchings of ruined churches certainly seem to capture a hint
of the artist's melancholic mood at the time. What I find particularly interesting
about these images, in terms of expressing melancholy—presuming that I am not
alone in seeing such a mood expressed in these prints—is the way that Bouroux
uses the juxtaposition of dark tones and dense line work rendering the ruins'
architectural details with the lightness and sparse line work describing their
surroundings to project non-visual feelings.
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