Ferdinand Gaillard (aka Claude Ferdinand Gaillard) (1834-87)
“Monseigneur de
Ségur” (Louis-Gaston de Segur), c1880
Etching on
cream wove paper
An early proof
before lettering
Size: (sheet)
26.5 x 22.8 cm; (plate) 12.6 x 10.3 cm
Condition: rich
proof impression with wide margins in near pristine condition—there is a tiny
mark on the left and lower margin.
I am selling
this powerfully confident original etching by a master from the 19th century for
a total cost of AU$198 (currently US$142.07/EUR125.72/GBP108.65 at the time of this listing) including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this amazing portrait where the artist has engaged in fully
examining each bump on the Monseigneur’s face—an approach known as haptic in
the sense that the artist portrays surfaces and forms like a blind person might
“feel” them—please contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send
you a PayPal invoice to make the payment easy.
This print has been sold
For those who like
to compare portraits of the same sitter by two different artists, this pair of
images is revealing (the print on the right is discussed in the previous post). The left image, by Gaillard, shows the strength and confidence
of a master draughtsman. By this I mean that each stroke is there for a reason.
Gillard’s approach is what is commonly termed “haptic.” It is an approach driven for the artist’s interest in finding visual equivalents for expressing
surfaces and forms like a blind person might “feel” the subject. As a
consequence of this approach, each bump in Monseigneur’s face is like a
battlefield of pits and bumps.
By comparison,
the right image, by Burney— a masterly etched copy of Gaillard’s original
painting—recreates in line the critical features that Burney observed in Gaillard’s
painting. Although I would not suggest, even for an instant, that Burney’s
portrait is not a psychological portrayal of the Monseigneur; after all, it is
a hauntingly powerful study of a man with a commanding presence. Nevertheless, Gaillard’s
portrait is fundamentally about portraying the facture and tone of Gaillard’s
painted portrait.
In short, the
essential differences of approach separating these two portraits is about:
- Gaillard’s sensuous recreation of Monseigneur’s
face by “finding” it using marks replicating the effects of physical touch, and
- Burney’s mimetic replication of what he observed
in the original painting of the Monseigneur.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please let me know your thoughts, advice about inaccuracies (including typos) and additional information that you would like to add to any post.