Gabriel de Roton (fl, 1865-1954) (Note: These dates are
based on QCLC WoldCat. [http://www.worldcat.org/identities/viaf-165663680/] that
offer a timeline of the publications illustrated by de Roton. Since 1954 there
have been 10 posthumous publications involving his illustrations.
“Portrait of
Thomas Combe”, 1892, after the marble bust of Thomas Combe by Thomas Woolner (1825–1892).
Reproduced in Philip Gilbert Hamerton’s (1892) “Man in Art: Studies in
Religious and Historical Art, Portrait, and Genre”, Macmillan, London, p.274.
(Note: I am
selling this large book (344 pages) with all the original prints (46 plates in
line-engraving, mezzotint, photogravure, hyalography, etching, and wood
engraving) for AU$350 plus the cost of shipping. The print that I am selling is
not from this intact volume.)
Hyalograph on
cream wove paper
Size: (sheet) 30.3
x 22 cm; (plate) 22.5 16.3 cm; (image borderline) 17.9 x 12.5 cm
Inscribed in
the plate at lower left with the artist’s signature in reverse.
Lettered below
the image borderline at centre: “IMP. CHARDON WITTMAN PARIS”
Condition:
excellent impression in excellent condition but with a minor age toning at the
edges of the sheet.
This print may
be of a low monitory value, but it is of great value to those interested in unusual technical processes. This print has been executed using the
hyalograph process (i.e. a rare hybrid process of cliché-verre where a drawing
on textured glass is transferred as a negative onto a printing plate that is
then etched like an aquatint). If you are interested in acquiring this
extraordinary print, I am offering it for AU$25 (currently US$17.94/EUR17.14/GBP14.59
at the time of this listing) in combination with the sale of other print(s).
Although the hyalograph
process faded into obscurity very quickly in the late 19th century as
other less demanding techniques took its place, there are qualities in the
prints printed from this process that are worth considering. For instance, from
my understanding of the process the artist literally drew with a pencil onto
roughened glass and this intimacy is captured in all the subtlety of the artist’s
touch in the prints such as this one. More impressive to my eyes is that the
prints exhibit a delicate almost transparent attribute that is close to the
luminosity—verging on transparency—and the surface facture of a hand drawn
image.
What is extra
appealing about this particular hyalograph is that it reproduces a marble bust
that has similar visual properties of translucency and sheen. In particular, the
hyalograph process seems perfectly suited to the rendering of the hair and that
amazing beard—a virtual cascade of curls—so that the hair looks like hair
carved in marble in terms of sharing a solid fluidity. Philip Gilbert Hamerton
(1892) in his discussion about this print in “Man in Art” makes the following very
interesting and insightful comment about the treatment of the hair in Woolner’s
sculpture: “The light strikes UPON the marble beard … [and, as a point of
comparison with real hair], it entangles itself WITHIN the natural beard” (p.
274). Hamerton also offers his personal assessment of the treatment of the
hair: “I do not remember in all plastic art a more magnificent example of the
hair and beard taken from actual life. There are ideal examples that may
surpass this, but purely as mental conceptions” (ibid).
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