Alfred-Alexandre Delauney (1830-1895)
“View of the Cologne Cathedral” (aka “View
of the Dom Church in Cologne” [Rijksmuseum title]), 1886 (as inscribed on
plate), proof before titling, hand-signed by Delauney, printed by A Clément (fl.
c. 1887–92), published by Valadon & Cie. Kunsthandel Boussod (aka Goupil) (1827–1919)
and Michael Knoedler & Co (fl.1846 –87) in London, Paris and New York (as
inscribed on plate).
Etching on heavy laid paper (3.5 cm
chain lines) with full margins as published, signed in pencil by the artist and
backed with a support sheet.
Size: (sheet) 93 x 65.5 cm; (plate) 76.8
x 52.5 cm; (image borderline) 72 x 49 cm
Hand-signed in pencil by Alfred-Alexandre
Delauney below the image borderline at lower right.
Inscribed on plate above the image
borderline: (right of centre) “April ts London Published by Boussod, Valadon & Co. successors to Goupil
& Co. 116 & 117 New Bond Street W.and 9 Rue Chaptal Paris. Copyright
registered”
Lettered on plate below the image
borderline: (left) “'Berlin, Verlag von Boussod, Valadon & Co.”; (centre) “'Publié
par BOUSSOD, VALADON & Co. Successeurs de GOUPIL & Cie 1er Avril
1885_ PARIS_LONDRES_LA HAYE”; (right) “New York_Published by M. Knoedler.”
Proof before the addition the title.
The Rijksmuseum offers the following
description of this print:
(transl.) “In the foreground a block of
houses in a bird's-eye view. On the second ground, the towers of the church
rise and cover the entire height of the print.” (http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.103096)
Condition: proof state richly inked and faultless
impression but with a closed tear in the lower left margin and a few minor
spots and signs of handling in the margins. The sheet is backed with a support
sheet of archival (millennium quality) washi paper.
I am selling this visually arresting and
technically breathtaking hand-signed proof state 19th century masterpiece
of etching for AU$424 (currently US$301.84/EUR260.49/GBP228.48 at the time of
posting this print) including postage and handling to anywhere in the world
(but not, of course, any import duties/taxes imposed by some countries).
If you are interested in purchasing this
awe inspiring, crowd stopping print, 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 is such a large print that when I
hold it from its upper edges the sheet is waist high from the ground... a huge
etching! Beyond its jaw-dropping and eye-popping size, the etching is a
technical masterwork of the printmaker’s drawing skill and the printer’s
dedication to the task of subtly capturing in this proof-state impression the finely
rendered detail.
One feature of this amazing print that catches
my eye is the perspective that Delauney employs in portraying the steeply
rising towers of the cathedral. At first glance, the rules of perspective seem
to be in place with the towers gently converging skywards to a far distant
point in the zenith. On closer examination, however, Delauney’s manipulation of
perspective becomes clearer. For example, the viewpoint for this scene is an
elevated one—a high flying drone’s viewpoint almost midway up the towers—and
yet we see the portico arches of the church as if from the viewpoint of a worm
on the ground.
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