Posts

Frederick Francis Foottet: A Forgotten Master

Image
The English Impressionist/Symbolist Frederick Francis Foottet was born in Yorkshire in 1850. Foottet made his debut at the Royal Academy in 1873, and continued to exhibit up to the 1930s. As a printmaker, Foottet made etchings from 1890, and colour lithographs from 1900. F. F. Foottet's first painting accepted by the Royal Academy was entitled December. Ruskin praised it, but added, "Yes, the artist is painting trees, but is he sure that he can draw a leaf?" Foottet then spent several months of intensive study of fruit and leaves under Ruskin's personal instruction. After this, Foottet left London to settle in Derby. Frederick Francis Foottet, Waterfall by moonlight Lithograph, 1900 This evocative colour lithograph by Foottet was published by The Studio, whose correspondent praised Foottet's "subtle and imaginative landscape work in lithography". Exposure to the work of the Impressionists and Symbolists had freed Foottet from the constrictions of Ruskin&

With the grain: the woodcuts of Ren� Quillivic

Image
The sculptor and wood engraver Ren� Quillivic (1879-1969) was born into a humble family in the village of Plouhinec in the department of Finist�re in Brittany. He attended the night classes at the �cole Boulle in Paris, studying sculpture under Marius Jean Antonin Merci�. Although he exhibited at various Paris Salons - des Artistes Fran�ais, de la Soci�t� Nationale des Beaux-Arts, des Ind�pendants, d'Automne - the art of Ren� Quillivic remained rooted in his native Brittany. He left his heart-rending mark on its landscape in the form of many war memorials to the fallen of the First World War. Many of these are in the Pays Bigouden, the area of Finist�re made famous by P�r-Jakez Helias in his marvellous book The Horse of Pride . Ren� Quillivic, Marine bretonne Woodcut, 1922 Besides his sculptures, Ren� Quillivic was noted for his woodcuts. He exhibited his prints in both Paris and London, and was a member of the Soci�t� de la Gravure sur Bois Originale. As a sculptor, Quillivic pref

Etchings by and after Rembrandt van Rijn

Image
The story of etching in France could be told simply in terms of French etchers' passionate engagement with the work of Rembrandt - as Alison McQueen has effectively done in her brilliant book The Rise of the Cult of Rembrandt: Re-inventing an Old Master in Nineteenth-Century France , which is available in full here . Rembrandt was not just the etchers' guru, as I described Maxime Lalanne in a recent post, but the etchers' god. Those who taught etching to hundreds, such as Charles Waltner or Alphonse Legros, held Rembrandt up as the most brilliant etcher of all time, and their students - such as Legros's star pupil William Strang - learned to gauge their own success or failure by comparison with the work of the Dutch master. Even Impressionist etchers such as Norbert Goeneutte and Henri Gu�rard started by copying Rembrandts. The result is that, besides the two original Rembrandt etchings that will be the main focus of this post, I have many etchings after Rembrandt by a

Process, materials, and aesthetics: woodblocks by Otto Eckmann

Image
Otto Eckmann was one of the most important figures in the Judgendstil (German Art Nouveau) art movement. Born in Hamburg in 1865, Otto Eckmann studied at the Kunstgewerbeschule in Hamburg, and then in Nuremberg, before entering the Munich Academy of Fine Art in 1885. In the end it was to be the arts and crafts element of his training that predominated. After initial success as a painter in the Symbolist style, in 1894 Otto Eckmann renounced oil painting and auctioned off his canvases. From this point he concentrated on graphics (particularly woodcuts) and on the design of tapestries, stained glass, furniture, fabrics, and ceramics. Otto Eckmann was also a pioneering typographer and type designer, and his Jugendstil typefaces Eckmann and Fette Eckmann are still in use today. Eckmann's type design was influenced by Japanese script, just as his woodcuts show the strong influence of Japanese art. Otto Eckmann was a major contributor to the two most important Art Nouveau revues publishe

A new moon

Image
Despite its harvest theme, I think this ravishing colour etching by Arthur Illies a suitable image for the turn of the year. It was published by the Jugendstil art revue Pan in 1896. Its title, Mondaufgang, means Moonrise, though this print also seems to be known as Ripe Cornfield, Evening, under which title it is one of the treasures of the Barber Institute of Fine Arts at Birmingham University. A gallery assistant at the Barber, Sarah Brown, writes eloquently about it here . As she writes, "The variety of colour throughout this image is immense, as gold, sienna and turquoise bring the mass of corn to life." This is landscape imbued with that spiritual potentiality that Gerard Manley Hopkins called "inscape". Arthur Illies, Mondaufgang Etching, 1896 The painter and printmaker Arthur Karl Wilhelm Illies was born in Hamburg in 1870, and died in L�neberg in 1952. Illies studied at the Munich Academy of Fine Art, after which he returned to Hamburg, under the patronage

Merry Christmas every one

Image
Adventures in the Print Trade wishes all its readers a merry Christmas and a peaceful 2011. Hermine David, Angel of the church bells Drypoint coloured � la poup�e, 1943 From one of 50 coloured suites of Hermine David's drypoints for an edition of Sagesse by Paul Verlaine. printed by Georges Leblanc on china paper

The etchers' guru - Maxime Lalanne

Image
The name of Maxime Lalanne would once have put thrills down the spine of many a keen young etcher - because it was Lalanne's Trait� de la gravure � l'eau-forte (Treatise on Etching), first published by Alfred Cadart in 1866, from which thousands taught themselves the art of etching. Walter Franklin Lansil from my last post was one such young hopeful - and he had the pleasure of seeing his first ever etching published in an 1880 American edition of Lalanne's work. But Lalanne was not just seen as a teacher, he was revered as a master of etching. Philip Gilbert Hamerton, for instance, an etcher himself and editor of The Portfolio , which published many original etchings, wrote that, "No one ever etched so gracefully as Maxime Lalanne." The etcher and lithographer Joseph Pennell went further, saying that "His ability to express a great building, a vast town, or a delicate little landscape has never been equalled, I think, by anybody but Whistler." So are t