SIXTY ORIGINAL DRAWINGS BY PRINT MAKERS
(American, British and Continental, 19th-20th Century)
(American, British and Continental, 19th-20th Century)
- Hervier, Une Femme
- Lalauze, La Compagnie Félicite
- Raffet, A Group of Men
- Steinlen, Head of a Man
- Ribot, Studies of a Left Hand
- Bèjot, Sur la Marne
- Carrière, Two Figures
- de Beaumont, “Je te reconnaitras bien…’’
- Bone, Winter near Aylmerton
- Bone, A Back Street
- Blampied, Deux Précieux
- Haden, English Landscape
- Haden, Sketches for “Greenwich”
- Howarth, A Street in Montreuil
- Auerbach-Levy , Caricature Portrait of Eugene O’Neill
- Kinney, Female Nude
- Singer, Shipping in the River
- de Martelly, Scene in an Inn
- Higgins, Peering Cat
- Hopkins, Pattern Designs
- Church,The Old Log Tavern
- Nisbet, Farm Buildings
- Thorne, Running Horse
- Capraro ,The Massacre of the Innocents
- Vierge, "Pablo de Segovia"
- Müller, Pianist
- Gaillard, Empress Catherine
- Lepic, La Cigogne
- van ‘s Gravesande, Katwyk
- Besnard, Eve
- Webster, Voiliers à Venise
- Webster, Farm House
- Prouvé, Design for a Leather Book Binding
- Buhot, Idée de Premier Frontispice pour "L’Ensorcelée"
- Buhot, Peasant Women
- Bléry, Osmonde et Taminier
- Lançon, An Arrest
- Pascin, Female Nude Study
- Trimolet, December
- Appian, Traveler in a Forest
- Calvert, Woodland Stream
- Calvert, Draped Female
- Giddens, Gerona, Spain
- McBey, Santa Cruz, California
- Dehn, Central Park, NYC
- Brockhurst, Anthea
- Petitjean, Portrait
- Cameron, Chinon
- MacLaughlan, Argentière
- Covarrubias, Billy Rose
- Forain, La Pluie d’Or
- Citon, Head of a Woman
- Kelsey, Village Street, Mexico
- Hart, Speaker and Listener
- Kupka, Robed Monk
- Chauvel, Pont de Sichol, Thiers
- Roussel, Ornament Study
- Raffaëlli, La Bièvre
- Lepere, Flooded Countryside
- Lalanne, Vast Pasture
Vast Pasture with a Distant Town
Black chalk on laid paper, 390 x 530 mm. Lalanne, directly or indirectly, taught etching to most of the French and British artists of the later nineteenth century, not least through his widely read treatise on the subject, but also through his own estimable prints. A purist, he endeavored to show what could be accomplished through the basic technique without recourse to drypoint, aquatint or manipulated plate tone. At the basis of such purism, of course, is the necessity of perfect draughtsmanship – and Lalanne drew superbly (Joseph Pennell, in one of his odder comments, insisted that Lalanne was a better draughtsman than Titian). We have here a large, impressive, highly finished and detailed drawing with no sign of a misstep, erasure or second thought, a tour-de-force of landscape representation. No preliminary sketch, it was done for itself alone.