Paul Sandby (1731–1809)
“Ruined Abbey with Cattle and a Man
Chopping Wood”, 1758, from a series of six etchings.
Etching (unsigned) on heavy laid paper
trimmed with a small margin around the image borderline, backed with a support
sheet.
Size: (sheet) 14.2 x 20.1 cm; (image
borderline) 13.5 x 19.3 cm
Proof before the addition of horizontal
lines in the sky and added marks to the shadow area towards the lower left
corner.
Gunn 2015 106 (Ann V Gunn 2015, “The
Prints of Paul Sandby (1731-1809): a catalogue raisonné”, New York, Brepols
N.V.)
The British Museum offers the following
description of this print:
“Rural landscape, showing a ruined
overgrown abbey with a low arched doorway in the wall running from the corner
of the building to left, with a shepherd approaching in the left foreground,
two cows grazing behind him, another man on the path below the ruin and a third
leading a horse and cart in the opposite direction in the far right.”
See also the brief description of this
print at the National Gallery of Art (Washington DC):
Condition: richly inked and well-printed
impression with light signs of use (i.e. minor abrasions, a flattened fold on
the right side and superficial marks) and laid upon a support sheet of archival
(millennium quality) washi paper.
I am selling this jewel-like glowing etching
by “the father of English watercolour” revealing Sandby’s romantic interest in ruins—especially
those festooned with plants as shown here—and the everyday activities of rural folk
(viz. chopping down trees, trekking around the countryside with a staff and hauling
wagons to an undisclosed destination), for AU$180 (currently US$129.28/EUR113.35/GBP97.88
at the time of posting this listing) 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
graphically strong composition by the first printmaker to create an aquatint, please
contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal
invoice to make the payment easy.
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