Charles Louis D'Henriet (1828–?)
“The Barque of Dante”, 1865, after Eugène Delacroix (1798–1863), printed by Auguste Delâtre (1822–1907) and published in “L’Artiste”.
Soft-ground etching printed in brown ink, trimmed at the platemark
with thread margins and re-margined with a support sheet.
Size: (support-sheet) 40.4 x 43.4 cm; (sheet) 22.3 x 28.5 cm;
(image borderline) 21.5 x 28.1 cm
Scratch-inscribed on plate below the image borderline: (left) “Publié
par L’Artiste.”; (centre) “T [?] D’Henriet d’après E. Delacroix.”; (right) "Paris.
Imp. e par Aug. Delâtre, Rue St. Jacque 171.”
The Library of Congress offers the following description of this
print:
“Print shows Dante and Virgil being ferried across the River Styx
by Phlegyas as tormented souls assail the boat from the wind tossed sea.” (https://www.loc.gov/item/2015647082/)
Condition: a richly inked impression trimmed to the platemark and
re-margined. The sheet is in near perfect condition (i.e. there are no tears, holes,
folds, abrasions, stains or foxing), but I can see an interesting hair mark
left during the inking of the plate above the figures of Dante and Virgil.
I am selling this richly etched translation of Delacroix’s famous
painting for AU$115 (currently US$93.39/EUR75.13/GBP65.97 at the time of
posting this listing). Postage for this print is extra and will be the
actual/true cost of shipping.
If you are interested in acquiring this darkly glowing soft-ground
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
I’m guessing that most folk would already be familiar with the
famous painting by Delacroix on which D’Henriet’s dark and moody etching is a translation.
In some ways the portrayed turmoil mirrors the conflict with the boundaries pushed
by Delacroix in his step away from the prevailing Neo-Classical interests at
the time to Romanticism. There is, however, an even more interesting aspect to
the painting that D’Henriet has taken a good deal of trouble to capture in this
print: the water droplets running down the stomach of the chap with a tormented
soul shown in a patch bright light in the foreground. These water droplets are perhaps
the most significant water droplets in the nineteenth century as they marked
the change from soft modelling to create the illusion of reality to the use of
dabs of pure colour of the Impressionists so that a single stroke of white
denotes the highlight on a droplet while the colours in shadows are signified respectively
with green for the mid-tone, yellow for the reflected light on the internal
back of the droplet and a dash of red for the cast shadow.
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