Unidentified 19th
century engraver
“Ignaz Graf von
Hardegg”, 1830
Engraving on
wove paper
Size: (sheet)
24.9 x 16.8 cm; (image borderline) 14.7 x 12.7 cm
Inscribed below
the image borderline in two lines: “IGNAZ / GRAF VON HARDEGG,”
Condition:
crisp impression in pristine condition.
This print may
be of a low monitory value, but it is of great value to those interested in
rarely seen technical processes. This print has been executed using a pantograph (a mechanical device
usually employed to copy images) to trace the contours of a low relief
sculpture in a matrix of vertical lines. If anyone is interested in acquiring
this extraordinary print, I am offering it for AU$25 (currently US$18/EUR17.13/GBP14.58
at the time of this listing) in combination with the sale of other print(s).
This print has been sold
This is far
from being an important engraving even though the subject portrayed, Ignaz Graf
von Hardegg (1772–1848), is a famous Austrian
cavalry general and a skilled commander during the Napoleonic Wars. The
attribute that sets it apart from the plethora of other engraved portraits from
the 19th century is the technique used to reproduce the low relief
sculpture of the general.
At first glance
from a distance, the engraved line work of the print merges beautifully
together to reveal the subtle modelling of the sculpture. Closer
examination—close enough to use a jeweller’s loupe—the detail of the line work
reveals the extraordinary technique used. Essentially the whole image consists
of finely laid vertical lines where slight curves within each line captures the
contours of the original sculpture.
The technique
is simple enough, in that the vertical lines are scored mechanically by a pantograph.
The real skill, however, lies in setting up the mechanism so that it only inscribes
vertical lines that almost “touch” each other and the angle adjustment of the tracing
stylus that moves over the sculpture to create the degree of contouring within
the lines. (My apologies to users of a pantograph for reproductive engraving if
my descriptions are not accurate.)
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