John Park (1830–91; fl. 1867-91)
“The End of the
Voyage”, c.1860–80, published by the revue “L'Art” in 1880, printed by François
Liénard (fl. c.1860s–1880s)
Etching with
drypoint on fine laid paper
Size: (sheet)
43.5 x 30.8 cm; (plate) 22.5 x 14.9 cm
Lettered below
image with title, production detail: "J. Park, del. et sc.", "F.
Liénard, Imp. Paris.", and: "L'Art."
The British Museum offers the following description of this print:
“View in a harbour in twilight, shadow of a ship in the right foreground with mast down, further ships mooring behind” (http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=3425471&partId=1&searchText=John+Park+the+end+of+the+voyage&page=1)
Condition: rich
and well-printed strong impressions with full margins (as published). There are
minute insect bite marks that are visible when the print is held to the light
and there is a small tear on the far left margin, otherwise the print is in
very good condition for its age.
I am selling this
romantic evening etching of a harbour scene showing the last vestiges of light
before darkness closes in for the total cost of AU$212 including postage and handling to anywhere
in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this remarkable original print from the nineteenth
century, please contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you
a PayPal invoice to make the payment easy.
For many years
I have been collecting etchings by John Park and the reason is simple: he is a
master of rendering shadow with line. Usually, Park builds up his shadowy areas
with a layering of knotted lines and spiralling rhythms that to my eyes connote
a feeling of unease. With this print, however, the representation of the
evening darkness seems relaxed and free of the usual knots and spiral of the
artist’s inner turmoil. Instead, the build-up of aligned strokes and velvety
drypoint lines project a feeling of tranquillity.
Notwithstanding
tranquillity of the scene, the stark silhouette of the foreground ship’s
rigging adds a prickly note of tension that—again from my personal reading of
the image—complements and underpins the otherwise pervading calmness.
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