Alfred-Louis Brunet-Debaines (1845–1939) after Joseph Mallord
William Turner (1775 [B] – 1851), published by Hamerton, Seeley and Jackson,
1876
(upper image)
"Boats"
(lower image)
"A Storm"
Etching and aquatint
Size: (sheet)
35.5 x 25 cm; (upper plate) 11.2 x 15 cm; (lower plate) 11.1 x 15 cm
Condition: two
crisp impressions in good condition printed on a single sheet of wove paper
with margins as published by Hamerton et al. There is faint scattered foxing.
I am selling
this pair of nineteenth century etchings after Turner, along with two
additional pages of etchings by Debaines that I will be listing further below
(i.e. 6 etchings in total) for AU$155 as group purchase (currently US$113.63/EUR100.22/GBP78.99
at the time of posting this listing) including postage and handling to anywhere
in the world.
If you are interested in purchasing this folio of etchings,
please contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal
invoice to make the payment easy.
Alfred-Louis Brunet-Debaines (1845–1939) after Joseph Mallord
William Turner (1775 [B] – 1851), published by Hamerton, Seeley and Jackson,
1876
(upper image)
"City on Rivers of France"
(lower image)
"Ruined Castle"
Etching and aquatint
Size: (sheet)
35.5 x 24 cm; (upper plate) 11 x 15 cm; (lower plate) 11.2 x 15 cm
Condition: two
crisp impressions in good condition printed on a single sheet of wove paper
with margins as published by Hamerton et al. There is faint scattered foxing.
This pair of
prints are worth close examination. The upper image is composed like a spiral
in perspective with the placement of two children in the foreground angled so
that their positions point to the inside of the spiral: rock face
fortifications. (I may be wrong about my description of this point of focus,
but I did consult with my cook—who knows everything—about what is portrayed in
this area and I'm advised that the area is like the walled fortifications on
the rock faces of Malta.)
The lower print
is a real peach. It is beautiful. It has everything that a romantic artist
loves: a partly obscured moon and an ominously impenetrable ruin in mist. Love
it. I also love Debaines' treatment of the castle textures that are suggested
without too much detail in a manner not too dissimilar to what Piranesi
sometimes employs to render details without actually showing details.
Alfred-Louis
Brunet-Debaines (1845–1939) after Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775 [B] –
1851), published by Hamerton, Seeley and Jackson, 1876
(upper image)
"View of the Loire"
(lower image)
"Rome"
Etching and aquatint
Size: (sheet)
36.5 x 24.9 cm; (upper plate) 11 x 14 cm; (lower plate) 11 x 16.7 cm
Condition: two
crisp impressions in good condition printed on a single sheet of wove paper
with margins as published by Hamerton et al. There is faint scattered foxing.
I don't know
why Hamerton chose to publish this combination of a views—one of the Loire and
the other of Rome—but the juxtaposition of the two etchings is difficult to
contemplate without seeing complementary ways of looking.
At first glance
I see a difference between the light and delicate treatment of the upper image
rendered mainly by line with the dark and solid treatment of the lower image
rendered mainly by tone. Beyond recognising this critical difference there are
much more subtle and fascinating differences. Note, for example, how the
composition of the upper image almost invites a viewer into the pictorial
depths of the scene while the composition of the lower image sets the viewer at
a distance—both visually and psychologically—away from the city in the middle
distance.
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