Joseph Mathias Negelen (1792–1870)
"Victor”,
1828, printed by Jean-François Villain (1822–52 fl.) and published by John Henry
Rittner (1802–40)
Lithograph on
wove paper
Size: (sheet)
41.8 x 31.3 cm
Signed and
dated by the artist in the plate (lower right) and lettered with the title and
production details below the image.
Condition: superb
impression in near pristine condition.
I am selling
this marvellous lithograph by one of the exceptional Swiss portrait artists of
the nineteenth century for AU$72 in total (currently US$53.04/EUR46.66/GBP36.54
at the time of posting this listing) including postage and handling to anywhere
in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this very sensitive rendering of a young boy, please
contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal
invoice to make the payment easy.
There may be
many books written about the craft of drawing but few writers address the
subtle principles behind creating a convincing portrait of a young boy.
Consequently, I thought I would have a go.
To make a boy
look like a boy and not like a young man is partly to do with proportion of the
head size to the rest of the body. More critical, however, a young boy needs to
be portrayed so that the viewer looks slightly down on him (i.e. more of the
top of his head is shown). Conversely to portray an older youth or an adult,
the viewer’s viewpoint is more likely to be at eye-level.
Another
principle—and a more contentious one—that is often employed by artists is that
young boys seem more like young boys when they are portrayed facing towards the
right. Conversely, youths and adults seem more “grounded” (i.e. wise to the
world around them) if they are portrayed facing towards the left. The
importance of such an arrangement may seem like nonsense but it works. If one
were to take a mirror image of this portrait so that the boy faced towards the
left rather than the right the psychological meaning of this portrait changes
significantly and the boy would seem much older than his young face suggests.
This principle is the same as how saints and sinners are portrayed: saints
nearly always face towards the left whereas sinners nearly always face towards
the right!
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