Félix Buhot (aka Félix Hilaire Buhot; Tohub) (1847–98)
frontispiece
for “I’llustration Nouvellle”, 1877
Etching, aquatint,
drypoint, roulette, lift ground and salt ground (etching) on cream laid paper
trimmed at the platemark
Size: (sheet)
34.6 x 26.8 cm
Signed on
plate: “F. Buhot inv. sc.”
The British
Museum offers the following description of this print:
“Steam
locomotive bearing the date '1877' entering a station, with cloud of putti coming
out of the chimney; on the left, the funeral of the burin, with putti
surrounding a large burin, and hovering above a funeral procession following a
coach bearing the date '1876'; in the right foreground, a snake … Etching,
aquatint, drypoint.” (http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=3048822&partId=1&searchText=buhot&page=1)
The curator of
the British Museum offers the following insight into the print’s meaning: “The
print is an allegory on the merits of etching over mere reproductive engraving.”
(ibid)
Bourcard 1899
124.IV (Gustave Bourcard 1899, “Catalogue descriptif de son [Félix Buhot]
oeuvre grave”, Paris)
Condition:
Superb, richly inked impression trimmed at the plate mark. There are remnants
of mounting hinges (verso) and there are also a few spots (perhaps foxing).
I am selling
this exceptionally rare print capturing the turmoil at a seminal point in the
history of illustration for AU$260 (currently US$200.05/EUR185.46/GBP160 at the
time of posting this listing) including postage and handling to anywhere in the
world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this graphically strong and historically significant print
by one of the major 19th century printmakers, 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
This may be one
of the most important prints of the nineteenth century. What I mean by this
bold assertion is not that it is the best image created in the nineteen century
but rather that it crystallises in graphic terms the change from the reproductive
art of the engraver preceding the year 1876 to the “new” breed of artist—the
painter-artist with an etching needle and a personal viewpoint.
At the time
that this print featured on the cover of “I’llustration Nouvellle” in 1877, the
image of the highly respected tool of the engraver, the burin, being carried from
a hearse into its demise in the sky accompanied by a swirl of cupids, would no
doubt have been very unsettling to the old guard of illustrators. Perhaps even
more upsetting is the idea of progress, symbolised by the advancing steam train
with the tool of the new illustrator—the etching needle—and the aspirations of
a fresh ways of thinking: the avant-garde
For me, this
print carries the same resonance of change. Years ago I never imagined that I
would be making images without physical substance and the shock of the
transition from analogue to digital is well represented by this steam train
running over anything that gets in its way.
For those
unfamiliar with Buhot’s prints, this artist is worth researching. What is especially
interesting, is his approach of annotating images with marginal sketches: what
he called his “marges symphoniques.” Regarding Buhot’s use of these marginal
sketches, I wish to point out that they became a feature in his work after
1876—the year that the spirit of change symbolised by the locomotive shown here
hurtles down the railway track to replace the engraving tradition.
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