Ignace
Duvivier (aka Ignaz Duvivier; Joseph Ignace Duvivier; Ignace Vivier;
Ignace "du" Vivier; Matthäus Ignaz [Edler von] Vivier) (1758–1832)
“Landscape in Oval with Travelers by Campfire”, 1800, from the
series of four oval landscape etchings, "Divers sujets de paisages dessiné
et gravé par I. Viviers 1800". Note: the title page to the series is
signed, titled and dated (1800).
Etching on cream wove paper.
Size: (sheet) 20.5 x 29.4 cm; (plate) 14.4 x 23.2 cm; (oval
borderline) 13.9 x 19 cm
The Philadelphia Museum of Art holds this print and others in the
same series; see: http://www.philamuseum.org/collections/permanent/3355.html?mulR=1175251812|5
and http://www.philamuseum.org/collections/results.html?searchTxt=&bSuggest=1&searchNameID=1925
Condition: richly inked, crisp impression—undoubtedly a lifetime
impression based on the superb quality of the printed lines—with generous
margins and in very good condition (i.e. there are no tears, holes, folds,
abrasions and stains, but there is faint foxing in the margins).
I am selling this very romantic image, freely drawn and using the chiaroscuro
lighting harking back to the tradition of Rembrandt for the total cost of [deleted] including
postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are interested in purchasing this rare etching, 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
At the time that this etching was executed at the close of the 18th
century, there were the beginnings of the “battle” that was to gather force
between printmakers who valued engraving and those that favoured etching. In
many ways the disagreements were significant as they reflected the decline of
the Art Academies by the mid-19th century with their reverence for Raphael
and engraving and the re-evaluation of Rembrandt and the merits of etching.
The reason that I mention this “battle” is because Duvivier is
clearly engaged in the same debate between the practices of engraving and
etching in this print. In his treatment of the sky, for instance, Duvivier
employs a visual device usually reserved for engraving: using ruled horizontal
lines to portray the tone of the sky with curved parallel strokes to give three-dimensional
form to clouds. By contrast, the rest of the composition is largely executed
using freely laid lines typifying the approach of the etcher. To my eyes, this
leap between the treatment of the sky with its disciplined rigor of tightly
controlled horizontal lines and the treatment of the foreground with its
seemingly immediate, loosely drawn—sketchy—marks crystallises Duvivier’s
dilemma.
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