Jean
Jacques de Boissieu (aka Jean Jacques de Boissieux) (1736–1810)
“Entrée de forêt avec une masure, à gauche” (Transl. “Entrance to
forest with hovel on the left”), 1772
Etching and drypoint on grey chine collé upon laid paper.
Size: (sheet) 40.9 x 54.6 cm; (plate) 28.7 x 40.6 cm
Inscribed with the artist’s monogram below the image borderline at
right: “DB *[asterisk]”
State iv (of iv) with the added monogram of the artist at lower
right with asterisk
Perez 61 IV (Perez, Marie-Félicie 1994, “L'Oeuvre gravé de
Jean-Jacques de Boissieu”, Geneva, pp. 142–43)
Condition: rare impression of great delicacy but there are spots
of restoration where the tissue thin chine collé has been cut.
There is also a closed tear at the centre top margin but this issue has been
addressed with the whole sheet having been laid upon a conservator’s support sheet.
I am selling this very poetic etching for the total cost of ... [deleted] at the time of posting this listing)
including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are interested in purchasing this beautiful print that one
could argue links the vision of Ruisdael with the artists of the Barbizon
School, 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
There is a companion print to this marvellous etching, titled “Entrée
de forêt en Brie, avec masure, à droite” (Ref. Perez 60) shown in the upper
image, which presents the same dilapidated house, but from the viewpoint of
standing behind it.
What I find interesting when studying these prints is that the
raking light in both scenes has such a remarkable effect on how I perceive the
form of the house, trees and figures. In short, the light streaming from the
left in the upper print seems (to my eye) to render the portrayed forms as being
more solidly three-dimensional than the same scene below it where the light
illuminates the features from the right side. This effect may simply be the
result of a Western reading direction and a whole tradition of art in Occidental
art of lighting subjects from the top-front-left but the comparison reveals how
important that the direction of light in a scene really is.
I should add at this point that even though the portrayed features
in upper print may be more convincingly three-dimensional, this does not mean
that I prefer the upper print. In truth, the opposite is true. For some strange
reason, I like the not-quite-so-real dimensions of the lower print with its
source of illumination from the right. Perhaps this is because the lower print has an aura of
unreality to it: an awkward reality that is subliminally unsettling, but which keeps me interested nevertheless.
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