Charles Jacque (aka Charles Émile Jacque; Charles Jaque) (1813–1894)
“Turkey Keeper” (aka “La Gardeuse
de Dindons”), 1865, plate 34, initially printed
by Auguste-Marie Delâtre (French, 1822-1907) before this publication
detail was erased, as is the case with this impression.
Etching, drypoint and engraving
on grey chine collé (China) on heavy cream wove paper with wide
margins.
Size: (sheet) 41.8 x 31.3 cm;
(plate) 24.9 x 18 cm; (chine collé) 22.5 x 15.4 cm; (image borderline) 21.8 x 14.9
cm.
Inscribed on plate within the
image borderline: (lower right corner) “Ch. Jacque”.
Lettered on plate below the
image borderline: (left) “CH. JACQUE INV. ET SC.”; (centre) “LA GARDEUSE DE
DINDONS”; (right of centre) “No. 34–3.”; (right) “IMP.”
State ii (of ii); Guiffrey
(1866) describes the first and second states: (Transl.) “First state: Pure
etching. Second state: The back of a turkey which is at the bottom has been
blanched [“blanchi”]. The back trees have been lowered and the left trees
blackened” (p. 102).
Guiffrey 211ii (J.-J. Guiffrey
1866, “L'Oeuvre de Ch. Jacque”, Paris, Lemaire, p. 102, cat. no. 186); Beraldi
211 (Henri Béraldi 1885–1892, “Les Graveurs du XIXe Siècle: Guide de l'Amateur
d'Estampes Modernes”, vol. VIII, Paris, Librairie L. Conquet, p. 188, cat. no.
211); IFF 314 (Jean Adhémar & Jacques Lethève 1954, “Inventaire du Fonds
Français après 1800”, vol. 11, Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, p. 116,
cat. no. 314).
Guiffrey (1866) offers the
following description of this print:
(Transl.) “A young peasant
woman leaning on the left on a long stick, her back against a tree, watches
several turkeys who are looking for food on the ground on the right. Trees
background. Two birds at the top of the sky. Signed: Ch. Jacque.” (p. 102).
See also the descriptions of
this print offered by the Rijksmuseum and the Harvard Art Museums: http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.128674;
https://hvrd.art/o/238877.
Condition: a richly inked and
well-printed impression with generous margins in a near pristine (museum
quality) condition with no tears, holes, folds, losses, abrasions,
significant stains or signs of handling.
I am selling this strong and
romantically beautiful etching of a young woman tending to her rafter of turkeys in
rural France, for AU$279 (currently US$215.83/EUR180.15/GBP155.92 at the time
of posting this print) including Express Mail (EMS) postage and handling to
anywhere in the world (but not, of course, any import duties/taxes imposed by
some countries).
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