Charles
Chaplin (aka Charles Joshua Chaplin) (1825–1891)
“Les Bulles de Savon” (Soap Bubbles), 1867, etching after
Charles Chaplin’s painting in the Luxembourg Museum (see https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Chaplin-The_Soap_Bubbles.jpg), plate 278 from the fifth volume of
prints produced by the Société des Aquafortistes (Society of Etchers), printed in
Paris by Alfred Cadart (1828–1875) (as
lettered in plate), before/after the change of publication details to the printer, Auguste
Delâtre (aka Auguste Marie Delâtre) (1822–1907) and publication by Cadart & Luquet (fl.1863–1867) in “Eaux-Fortes
Modernes”, vol. 5 (1867).
Etching
on laid paper with wide margins.
Size:
(sheet) 25.5 x 20.1 cm; (plate) 15 x 11.7 cm; (image borderline) 12.1 x 9.3 cm.
Numbered
in plate above the image borderline: (right) “278.”
Lettered
in plate below the image borderline: (left) “Ch. Chaplin sculp.”; (centre) “LES
BULLES DE SAVON.”; (right) “Imp. A. CADART, Paris.”
Beraldi
36 (Henri Beraldi 1886, “Les Graveurs du XIX Siecle”, Paris, Librairie L.
Conquet, vol. 4, p. 92, cat. no. 36).
The
British Museum offers a description of this print with the earlier/later printer and
publisher details: https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/P_1867-1214-41.
Condition:
a strong and well-printed impression with wide margins in a near
pristine condition with no tears, holes, folds, abrasions, significant stains (note
that the back of the sheet is slightly dusty) or foxing.
I am
selling this small and beautifully executed etching from the genre of vanitas prints—mindful
that bubbles are often used in images to symbolise the notions of life’s transience,
brevity and the spontaneity of death—and prints that draw upon the symbolism of
women and their labours—mindful that the distaff shown here leaning on the
spinning wheel has a history of being a symbolic weapon of women while the
spinning wheel is a key symbolic tool of women’s industry—for AU$212 in total
(currently US$141.70/EUR128.21/GBP112.86 at the time of 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 wonderful etching—to my eyes it has the
allure of a Vermeer! —please contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I
will send you a PayPal invoice to make the payment easy.
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