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Style: French School
Antique Etching Le Lion Qui Marche by Antoine-Louis Barye (French, 1796-1875)
Located in SANTA FE, NM
Le Lion Qui Marche
Antoine-Louis Barye (French, 1796-1875)
Circa 1880
Etching on laid paper after the original bronze by master etcher Abel Lurat (F...
Category
1880s French School Animal Prints
Materials
Paper, Ink, Etching
La Pique (The Pike)
Located in Fairlawn, OH
La Pique (The Pike)
Lithograph, 1950
Original lithograph drawn with chalk and "frottage textures" transferred to stone, 1950.
Unsigned printer's proof
Inscribed on the verso in Mourl...
Category
1950s French School Animal Prints
Materials
Lithograph
Two Goats, from "Daphnis
Chloe"
Located in Middletown, NY
Woodcut on hand made laid paper with the publisher's watermark designed by the artist, full margins. From the special suite of 53 woodcut illustrations which were laid in loose to t...
Category
Mid-20th Century French School Animal Prints
Materials
Handmade Paper, Laid Paper, Woodcut
Guet-Apens, par Gill; Cover Illustration from L
Eclipse, 17 March, 1872
By André Gill
Located in Middletown, NY
Paris: L'Eclipse, 1872.
Woodcut engraving with handcoloring on light-weight wove paper, 13 3/4 x 11 5/8 inches (347 x 294 mm), margins trimmed. Illustrated in Histoire de la révolut...
Category
19th Century French School Animal Prints
Materials
Watercolor, Woodcut
"Three Herons" - Hand Watercolor Engraving
Located in Soquel, CA
"Three Herons" - Hand Watercolor Engraving
"Three Herons" from a collection of the Most Rare Birds Drawn and Engraved From Life, A Natural and Rational History of the Different Bird...
Category
17th Century French School Animal Prints
Materials
Paper, Watercolor, Engraving
$772 Sale Price
20% Off
Watchdog, from Eaux-Fortes Animaux
Paysages
By Karl Bodmer
Located in Middletown, NY
Paris: Jules Géruzet, 1860. Etching on cream laid paper, 3 1/2 x 5 inches (88 x 121 mm), full margins. Minor uniform age tone. Printed by George Bertauts, Paris.
[Beraldi II.140.24...
Category
Mid-19th Century French School Animal Prints
Materials
Laid Paper, Etching
St. George and the Dragon after Raphael
Located in Fairlawn, OH
St. George and the Dragon after Raphael
Engraving, 1885
Unsigned, proof before letters
A engraving after a painting by Raphael (c.1504-05) now in the Musée du Louvre, Paris (inv. no....
Category
1880s French School Animal Prints
Materials
Engraving
Sun Bear - Ursus malayanus, mid 19th French century engraving
Located in Melbourne, Victoria
'Ours malais, Ursus malayanus, Raffles''
French engraving with original hand-colourimg, circa 1840.
Category
Mid-19th Century French School Animal Prints
Materials
Engraving
Red Panda and Greater Hog Badger, mid 19th French century animal engraving
Located in Melbourne, Victoria
'1. Le Panda, Ailurus Fulgens, F Cuvier 2. Balisaur, Arctonyx Collaris, F Cuvier'
French engraving with original hand-colourimg, circa 1840.
Category
Mid-19th Century French School Animal Prints
Materials
Engraving
Vicuna and Llama, mid 19th French century animal engraving
Located in Melbourne, Victoria
'1. Vigigne 2. Lama' (1. Vicuna 2' Llama)
French engraving with original hand-colourimg, circa 1840.
Category
Mid-19th Century French School Animal Prints
Materials
Engraving
"Collection Of The Most Rare Birds" - Hand Watercolor Engraving
Located in Soquel, CA
"Collection Of The Most Rare Birds" - Hand Colored Engraving
Collection of the Most Rare Birds Drawn and Engraved From Life, A Natural and Rational Histor...
Category
17th Century French School Animal Prints
Materials
Paper, Watercolor, Engraving
Chevrotain and Arab Antelope, mid 19th French century animal engraving
Located in Melbourne, Victoria
'1. Chevrotin 2. Antilope Arabica'
French engraving with original hand-colouring, circa 1840.
Category
Mid-19th Century French School Animal Prints
Materials
Engraving
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H 24.75 in W 23 in
"Winter Wildfowling" Frank Weston Benson, Hunting Scene, Outdoors, Marshes
Located in New York, NY
Frank Weston Benson
Winter Wildfowling, 1927
Signed lower left
Etching on paper
Image 8 1/2 x 7 inches
Born in Salem, Massachusetts, a descendant of a long line of sea captains, Benson first studied art at Boston’s Museum School where he became editor of the student magazine. In 1883, Benson enrolled at the Académie Julian in Paris where artists such as Bouguereau, Lefebvre, Constant, Doucet and Boulanger taught students from all over Europe and America. It was Boulanger who gave Benson his highest commendation. “Young man,” he said, “Your career is in your hands . . . you will do very well.” Benson’s parents gave him a present of one thousand dollars a twenty-first birthday and told him to return home when it ran out. The money lasted long enough to provide Benson with two years of schooling in Paris, a summer at the seaside village of Concarneau in Brittany and travel in England.
Upon returning to America, Benson opened a studio on Salem’s Chestnut Street and began painting portraits of family and friends. An oil of his wife, Ellen Perry Peirson, dressed in her wedding gown is representative of this period. It demonstrates not only the academic techniques he learned at the Academie Julian but also his own growing emphasis on the effects of light. And yet, despite all the technical mastery displayed in the work, the painting exudes the warmth that existed between model and artist. More than a likeness, it is a study in serenity. Perhaps it was of a work such as this that Benson was thinking when he said, “The more a painter knows about his subject, the more he studies and understands it, the more the true nature of it is perceived by whoever looks at it, even though it is extremely subtle and not easy to see or understand. A painter must search deeply into the aspects of a subject, must know and understand it thoroughly before he can represent it well.”
Following a brief stint as an instructor at the Portland, Maine, Society of Art, Benson was appointed as instructor of antique drawing at the Museum School in Boston in the spring of l889. Benson’s long association with the school was particularly fruitful. Under the leadership of Edmund Tarbell and Benson the Museum School became a national and internationally recognized institution. The students won numerous prizes, enrollment tripled, a new school building was erected and visiting delegations from other schools sought the secret of their success. Benson cherished his role as teacher and was held in high esteem by his students, many of whom called him “Cher Maitre.” Reminiscing about his long career with the school Benson once said, “I may have taught many students, but it was I who learned the most.”
In 1890, Benson won the Hallgarten Prize at the National Academy in New York. It was the first of a long series of awards, that earning for him the sobriquet “America’s Most Medalled Painter.” In the early years of his career, Benson’s studio works were mostly portraits or paintings of figures set in richly appointed interiors. Young women in white stretch their hands out towards the glow of an unseen fire; girls converse on an antique settee in a room full of objets d’arts; his first daughter, Eleanor, poses with her cat. Works of this sort, together with a steady influx of portrait commissions, earned Benson both renown and financial rewards, yet it was in his outdoor works that gave Benson his greatest pleasure.
In the latter half of the 1890s, Benson summered in Newcastle, on New Hampshire’s short stretch of seacoast. It was here, in 1899, that Benson made his first foray into impressionism with Children in the Woods and The Sisters, the latter a sun-dappled study of his two youngest daughters, Sylvia and Elisabeth.
This painting was one of the first works that Benson hung at an exhibition with nine friends. The resignation of these ten illustrious artists rocked the American art establishment but, the catalogue for their first exhibition was titled, simply, “Ten American Painters.” When, in 1898, the three Bostonians and seven New Yorkers began to exhibit their best work in exquisitely arranged small shows, the group (dubbed by newspapers, “The Ten” ) quickly became known as the American Impressionists, a bow to the style of their French predecessors. The Ten’s annual shows soon became an eagerly awaited part of the annual exhibition calendar and were always well reviewed. Held annually in New York City, the group’s yearly exhibitions usually traveled to Boston and were occasionally seen in other cities. Benson’s association with other members of the group such as Childe Hassam, Thomas Dewing, William Merrit Chase and J. Alden Weir, only reinforced his growing emphasis on the tenets of Impressionism. As he later said to his daughter Eleanor, “I follow the light, where it comes from, where it goes.”
The principles of Impressionism began to dominate Benson’s work by 1901, the year that the Bensons first summered on the island of North Haven in Maine’s Penobscot Bay. His summer home “Wooster Farm,” which they rented and finally bought in 1906, became the setting for some of Benson’s best known work and there, it seemed, he found endless inspiration. Benson’s sparkling plein-air paintings of his children–Eleanor, George, Elisabeth and Sylvia–capture the very essence of summer and have been widely reproduced: In The Hilltop, George and Eleanor watch the sailboat races from the headland near their house.
As a boy, Benson dreamed of being an ornithological illustrator. In mid-life, he returned to the wildfowl and sporting subjects that had remained his lifelong passion. Using etching and lithography, watercolor, oil and wash, Benson portrayed the birds observed since childhood and captured scenes of his hunting and fishing expeditions.
Together with his two brothers-in-law, Benson bought a small hunting retreat on a hill overlooking Cape Cod’s Nauset Marsh. Here, in the late 1890s, he began experimenting with black and white wash drawings. These paintings became so popular that Benson was not able to keep up with the demand. He turned to an art publishing company to have several made into it intaglio prints; twelve wash drawings are known to have been reproduced in this manner. At least two of them were given as gifts to associate members of the Boston Guild of artists, of which Benson was a founding member.
Benson was also an avid fisherman and his salmon fishing expeditions to Canada’s Gaspé Peninsula where one of the high points of his summer. There, in 1921, he began the first in a series of watercolors that would eventually over 500 works.
Benson’s watercolors conveyed the joy and beauty of a sportsman’s life whether in a painting of a hunter setting out decoys, a flock of ducks coming in for a landing or a grouse flushed from cover. The critics favorably compared Benson’s watercolors to those of Homer. “The love of the almost primitive wilderness which appears in many of Homer’s landscapes and the swift, sure touch with which he suggests rather than describes–these also characterize Benson’s work,” one critic wrote. “The solitude of the northern woods is very much like Homer’s.”
Like the wash drawings before them, Benson’s watercolors proved...
Category
1920s French School Animal Prints
Materials
Paper, Etching
St. George and the Dragon after Raphael
Located in Fairlawn, OH
St. George and the Dragon after Raphael
Engraving, 1885
Unsigned, proof before letters
A engraving after a painting by Raphael (c.1504-05) now in the Musée du Louvre, Paris (inv. no....
Category
1880s French School Animal Prints
Materials
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Previously Available Items
Untitled (landscape with horse and flowers)
By Hoi Lebadang
Located in Fairlawn, OH
Untitled (landscape with horse and flowers)
Color lithograph, c. 1958-1964 a very early and rare work by the artist
Signed and numbered in pencil (see photos)
Edition: 260 (47/260)
Condition: Appropriate aging to the paper
On reverse, small adhesive residue from a sticker
Image size: 15 1/4 x 20 3/4 inches
Sheet size: 19 1/2 x 25 1/2 inches
Note: In 1958, in Paris, Lebadang discovered lithography in the Arts-Litho studio, and regularly attended the studios of Fernand Mourlot and Jacques Desjobert. In 1964, he achieved Eight horses, his first portfolio done in relief, without colours nor ink, on the poems and calligraphy of Chou Ling who initiated his early research on the materials and techniques of making prints.
In the 1970s, he brought out several porfolios of prints with some new and innovative techniques: relief engravings, embossing, etching on an embossed background, lithographs on doubled Japanese paper, lithographs and reliefs, serigraphs using a « technique of gilding » that he developed in the studios of Circle Fine Art in the United States. Courtesy the artist's web site.
Hoi Lebadang
(1922-2015)
Lebadang (Hoi) was born in Quang Tri, Vietnam in 1922. He moved to France in 1939 to pursue an art career at Ecole de Beaus Arts...
Category
1950s French School Animal Prints
Materials
Lithograph
Brown Bears, Beaver, Polar Bear, mid 19th French century animal engraving
Located in Melbourne, Victoria
'1. L'Ours brun 2. Castor 3. L'Ours blanc'
French engraving with original hand-colourimg, circa 1840.
Category
Mid-19th Century French School Animal Prints
Materials
Engraving
Goats, mid 19th French century animal engraving
Located in Melbourne, Victoria
'1. Chevre de India 2. Chevre de Syrie'
French engraving with original hand-colourimg, circa 1840.
Category
Mid-19th Century French School Animal Prints
Materials
Engraving
Langur monkey, mid 19th French century animal engraving
Located in Melbourne, Victoria
'Semnopitheque a croupion - Semnopithecus Leucoprymnus, Otto' (Langur)
French engraving with original hand-colourimg, circa 1840.
Category
Mid-19th Century French School Animal Prints
Materials
Engraving
Capuchins, mid 19th French century animal engraving
Located in Melbourne, Victoria
'1. Le Sajou cornu 2. Le Sajou brun' (1. Black-horned Capuchin 2. Tufted Capuchin)
French engraving with original hand-colourimg, circa 1840.
Category
Mid-19th Century French School Animal Prints
Materials
Engraving
Alpaca, mid 19th French century animal engraving
Located in Melbourne, Victoria
'L'Alpaco (d'apres Griffith), Lama Alpaca, Less.'
French engraving with original hand-colourimg, circa 1840.
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Mid-19th Century French School Animal Prints
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French School animal prints for sale on 1stDibs.
Find a wide variety of authentic French School animal prints available for sale on 1stDibs. Works in this style were very popular during the 20th Century, but contemporary artists have continued to produce works inspired by this movement. If you’re looking to add animal prints created in this style to introduce contrast in an otherwise neutral space in your home, the works available on 1stDibs include elements of orange and other colors. Many Pop art paintings were created by popular artists on 1stDibs, including Antoine-Louis Barye, Karl Bodmer, Jean Picart Le Doux, and Jean Lurcat. Frequently made by artists working with Engraving, and Lithograph and other materials, all of these pieces for sale are unique and have attracted attention over the years. Not every interior allows for large French School animal prints, so small editions measuring 4.88 inches across are also available. Prices for animal prints made by famous or emerging artists can differ depending on medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $95 and tops out at $6,000, while the average work sells for $95.
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