323 results for ""magnifying glass""
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Large Religious Engraving showing the Acts of the Saints, 1730
Located in Langweer, NL
Antique frontispiece titled 'Acta Sanctorum Mensis Iulius'. Shows the Acts of the Saints, depicting a female figure seated at the top of the page, being presented volumes labeled by ...
Category
Antique 18th Century Prints
Materials
Paper
$261 Sale Price
20% Off
Rare Heliogravures of Singapore and Johore, Published in 1907
Located in Langweer, NL
Rare views of early Singapore and Johore in 1907.
1) Mosque at Johore
2) Tyersall
Ad 2: Tyersall Park is a historical estate in Singapore, bound by Holland Road and Tyersall Avenue, near the Singapore Botanic Gardens. It was private land belonging to the Malaysian state of Johor from 1862. Some portions of it had been acquired by the Government of Singapore in 1990 and in 2009 respectively. The property is restricted from the public and is fenced along Tyersall Avenue. The ring road known as Catterick Circle used to run through the estate, and was still shown on maps even after the late Sultan of Johor's former palaces were no longer charted on any modern maps of Singapore...
Category
Antique Early 1900s Prints
Materials
Paper
Death in Venice (entire text)
By Karyn Mannix
Located in East Hampton, NY
Of Mice & Men
Bar Code Series A definite "conversation" piece of art.
Comes with a magnifying glass.
*detail images may be from another barcode. All font sizing is similar.
Each pi...
Category
2010s New Media More Prints
Materials
Archival Paper
Mid-Century Oscar Torlasco Glass Italian Sconce for Stilkronen, 1960s
By Oscar Torlasco, Stilkronen
Located in Roma, IT
A beautiful double tile steel and glass wall lamp from the 1960s. This applique was designed by Oscar Torlasco for Stilkronen in Italy.
This fantastic one is fantastic as it is ma...
Category
Mid-20th Century Italian Mid-Century Modern Flush Mount
Materials
Steel, Chrome
Rare Heliograph of the Teutonia Club in Colonial Singapore, 1907
Located in Langweer, NL
Teutonia Club, Singapore. Established in 1856, the club was an elite enclave for the German community in Singapore until it was bought over by three Jewish brothers from the Manasseh...
Category
Antique Early 1900s Dutch Prints
Materials
Paper
Marc Sijan Hyperrealist Contemporary Plaster Sculpture Woman and Champagne Glass
By Marc Sijan
Located in Surfside, FL
Marc Sijan (American, born 1946)
Hyper realistic wall sculpture. titled and dated on verso
"Champagne Glass"
1986
Limited edition number 14/95. Features a Art Deco style girl in ...
Category
1980s Photorealist Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Acrylic Polymer, Glass, Plaster
Dutch Arnhem Holland "Elrakka" Pottery, ca 1915
Located in Delft, NL
Dutch Arnhem Holland "Elrakka" Pottery, ca 1915
2 equal long neck vases and a round jug from the Arnhemsche Fayence factory by the Vet brothers, The Netherlands. Ca. 1915. The set is colored in green, brown, blue and yellow with black lines with craquelure. 1 vase has thickening of glaze on the edge and the other viewed with a magnifying glass, probably a miniscule chip. This has been added via photo (enlarged with a loupe)
Klaas and Jacob Vet open their pottery factory in Purmerend in 1903. They already had the necessary ceramic experience. Klaas acquired this as a modeller at Plateelbakkerij De Distel...
Category
Early 20th Century Dutch Vases
Materials
Pottery
Rare Heliograph of the Government House in Colonial Singapore, 1907
Located in Langweer, NL
Original Image of the Government House, Singapore, of over 100 years old. Very rare.
The Istana (English: The Palace) is nowadays the official resi...
Category
Antique Early 1900s Dutch Prints
Materials
Paper
Heliograph of Tin Mining in Tronoh, Perak and Tambun in Sabah, Malaysia, 1907
Located in Langweer, NL
Three views of the Mining Industry in Malaysia around 1907.
1. Lankshuts at Tronoh, Perak
2. Puddling Machinery, Tambun in Sabah
3. Shaking Machinery at Red Hill
This helio...
Category
Antique Early 1900s Antiquities
Materials
Paper
Four Rare Heliograph Views of Mining Near Sungei Bessi River in Malaysia, 1907
Located in Langweer, NL
Four views of early Mining operations in Malaysia at the beginning of the 20th century. Published in 1907.
1) A Sand-Lake of Residue (Sungai of Sungei Bessi)
2) Chinese Smelting...
Category
Antique Early 1900s Prints
Materials
Paper
Rare Heliogravures of Singapore and Johore, Published in 1907
Located in Langweer, NL
Rare views of early Singapore and Johore in 1907.
1) Swiss Rifling Club
2) Woodlands Station
3) Johore
These heliogravures are on one leaf from the extremely rare boxed Ma...
Category
Antique Early 1900s Prints
Materials
Paper
Early 18thc French Watercolor Portrait Seated Lady Drawing Castle in Background
Located in Savannah, GA
This charming early 1800s French Empire watercolor on paper features a fine lady seated upon a récamier. She wears a stylish high-waisted neoclassical dress and matching bonnet, note...
Category
Antique 1820s French Neoclassical Paintings
Materials
Glass, Giltwood, Paper
$796 Sale Price
20% Off
Tang Dynasty Painted Pottery Fat lady Sculpture
Located in Dallas, TX
A wonderful period Tang Dynasty Pottery Figure of a Fat Lady.
Tomb Pottery
China
Height: 15 Inches
No TL Test
A COA by Avantiques will accompany the sale of this item.
Condition: Ve...
Category
Antique 15th Century and Earlier Chinese Tang Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Pottery
Magnifying Desk Lamp
Located in New York, NY
Steel top opens and magnifying glass pieces are stored inside.
Category
Vintage 1910s British More Lighting
Materials
Steel
$1,500
Italian Midcentury Chandelier Attributed to O
luce
By O-Luce
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Five globe ceiling lights, hand cut-glass on the side and in the middle magnifying glass on metal base.
Category
Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Chandeliers and Pendants
Materials
Metal
$1,095 Sale Price
70% Off
Antique Empire Quizzing Glass Forged Iron Polished Cut Steel
Located in Munich, Bavaria
This Iron quizzing glass was crated towards the end of the eighteenth century in France. The large round split ring indicates that it was to be worn on a chain. Thirty two round stee...
Category
Antique 1790s French Empire Vanity Items
Materials
Cut Steel
Rare Piel Frères Paris France Peacock Eye Pin Brooch
By Piel Frères
Located in Monroe Township, NJ
Large Antique Art nouveau Peacock eye Pin /brooch attributed to Piel Frères in Paris, France . Pin features a central foil glass set on an what looks like cop...
Category
Early 20th Century French Art Nouveau Brooches
Materials
Base Metal
Mid 19th Century Side Table with fantastic Marquetry
Located in Greven, DE
Side table with fine marquetry
France - Mid 19th century
Dimensions: H x W x D: 77 x 47 x 37 cm
Description:
Exceptional side table from the period around 1840, rarely found in th...
Category
Antique Mid-19th Century French Charles X Side Tables
Materials
Metal
Scurrula, Surrealist Mixed Media and Found Objects on Canvas by Mihail Sorin
By Mihail Sorin
Located in Long Island City, NY
Artist: Mihail Sorin
Title: Scurrula
Year: 2000
Medium: Oil on Canvas with Wood Frame with Magnifying Glass
Size: 23.5 x 19.75 in. (59.69 x 50.17 cm)
Interior Frame Size: 54 x 42.5 x...
Category
Early 2000s Surrealist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Wood, Found Objects, Oil
c.1910 Czechoslovakian Byzantine Inspired Antique Glass Pendant Necklace
Located in Skelmersdale, GB
This beautiful necklace, reflects the craftsmanship and eye for detail that is characteristic of Czechoslovakian jewellery design.
Condition ...
Category
Vintage 1910s Czech Edwardian Pendant Necklaces
1970s Vintage Turkish Rug in Red
Pink Geometric Patterns by Rug
Kilim
Located in Long Island City, NY
Hand-knotted in all wool, a vintage rug from Turkey circa 1970-1980 carrying a uniquely modern approach for its time. Playing a Deco linear sensibility with abstract dimensionality, ...
Category
Vintage 1970s Turkish Art Deco Turkish Rugs
Materials
Wool
Golf Malheur - contemporary original art in boxes artwork by Volker Kuhn
By Volker Kuhn
Located in Hamburg, DE
"Golf Malheur" is an original mixed media artwork by Volker Kuhn. The work is hand-signed by the artist below the artwork on the mat. It is a witty reference formed as a hand-made as...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Assemblage Mixed Media
Materials
Wood, Mixed Media, Acrylic
Still Life with Cherries
By Otto Eichinger
Located in Sheffield, MA
Otto Eichinger
Austrian, 1922 – 2004
Still Life with Cherries
Oil on panel
10 ¼ by 12 ¾ in, w/ frame 17 ¼ by 19 ¾ in
Signed lower right
Otto Eichinger was born in 1922 in Vienna, A...
Category
Late 20th Century Naturalistic Still-life Paintings
Materials
Oil
The Antiquaries Hand-Colored Lithograph, Satirical Caricature, c.1823
Located in Langweer, NL
The Antiquaries – Boilly Satire on Collectors, Hand-Colored, c.1823
Description:
The Antiquaries is one of Boilly’s most enduringly popular compositions, portraying a group of elder...
Category
Antique 1820s British Prints
Materials
Paper
La Rue Sauton Paris
By John Taylor Arms
Located in Middletown, NY
Etching on laid paper, 13 1/2 x 7 1/2 (343 x 191); sheet 16 1/2 x 11 inches (420 x 280 mm), full margins. Signed and dated by Arms in the lower right corner. From the edition of 150 ...
Category
Early 20th Century American Modern Landscape Prints
Materials
Handmade Paper, Laid Paper, Etching
The Boat Builders Yard, San Trovaso
By John Taylor Arms
Located in Middletown, NY
Etching on watermarked antique handmade FJ Head paper, 9 1/2 x 14 3/4 inches (240 x 373 mm); sheet 14 x 18 1/4 inches (355 x 463 mm), full margins. Signed and dated in pencil, lower margin. Edition of 97. A magnificent, silvery impression with extremely minor (almost invisible) mat tone.
[Fletcher 177]
[Illustrated: Page 160, Arms, Dorothy Noyes, "Hilltowns and Cities of Northern Italy"].
The Boat Builders Yard in San Trovaso is a historic 17th-century gondola repair and building yard in Venice, Italy. It's one of the few remaining such workshops in Venice, where skilled artisans traditionally craft and maintain the iconic black gondolas used...
Category
Early 20th Century American Modern Landscape Prints
Materials
Etching, Handmade Paper
Amiens; The Cathedral of Notre Dame, from the Lower Town
By John Taylor Arms
Located in Middletown, NY
A superb impression from the artist's own collection.
Etching with drypoint on watermarked FJ Head & Co. handmade laid paper, 10 3/4 x 9 7/8 inches (272 x 252 mm); sheet 18 1/8 x 14 ...
Category
Early 20th Century American Modern Landscape Prints
Materials
Handmade Paper, Laid Paper, Etching, Drypoint
Of Mice
Men (entire text)
By Karyn Mannix
Located in East Hampton, NY
Of Mice & Men
Bar Code Series A definite "conversation" piece of art.
Comes with a magnifying glass.
*detail images may be from another barcode. All font sizing is similar.
Each pi...
Category
2010s New Media More Prints
Materials
Archival Paper
Beluga Whale (Delphinapterus leucas)
By Henry Horenstein
Located in New York, NY
Sepia-toned gelatin silver print
Signed and numbered, verso
24 x 20 inches, sheet
(Edition of 35)
39 x 26 inches, sheet
(Edition of 15)
This photograph is offered by ClampArt, located in New York City.
“Horenstein’s creatures are decontextualized. They appear without the backdrop of the natural landscape, outside even the artificial world of the zoo or aquarium, and devoid of their true color. As a consequence, the images are truly arresting; and in both a literal and a metaphorical sense, we see these animals as we have never seen them before. We notice details, and Horenstein focuses our vision on the unexpected: the foot of an elephant, the eye of an octopus, the hair on the back of a gibbon’s head, the pattern of feathers on a bird’s neck. He plays with scale: the rear end and tail of a rhinoceros occupy the entire picture frame. We see these as if through a magnifying glass. His pictures challenge us to look more closely, to ask questions and make connections. We think about form and function: the relationship between an elephant’s foot, a horse’s hoof, and our own toes. We ponder modes of sensing and communication: the signals that hold together a school of fish. Examining these photographs, we become scientists and discoverers.
“In some respects, Horenstein’s work continues a centuries-old tradition of natural history illustration in the realm of photography. In natural history illustration, animals are often presented in shallow space with limited landscape, sometimes even against a blank page, in order to promote close examination and study of detail. But as much as these photographs promote scientific inquiry, they are more than scientific illustration. Animals were the subjects of our first art and our first metaphors; and freed from the constraints of space and time, many of Horenstein’s creatures remind us of the lost magical connection between the ‘animal world’ and our own. They are unsettling and they mesmerize. They transcend and transgress familiar boundaries between subject and object. Who is observing whom? The Komodo dragon looks at us with piercing eyes. We’re transfixed by the gaze of the harbor...
Category
1990s Other Art Style Black and White Photography
Materials
Silver Gelatin
Emperor Penguin (Aptenodytes forsteri)
By Henry Horenstein
Located in New York, NY
Sepia-toned gelatin silver print
Signed and numbered, verso
24 x 20 inches, sheet
(Edition of 35)
39 x 26 inches, sheet
(Edition of 15)
This photograph is offered by ClampArt, located in New York City.
“Horenstein’s creatures are decontextualized. They appear without the backdrop of the natural landscape, outside even the artificial world of the zoo or aquarium, and devoid of their true color. As a consequence, the images are truly arresting; and in both a literal and a metaphorical sense, we see these animals as we have never seen them before. We notice details, and Horenstein focuses our vision on the unexpected: the foot of an elephant, the eye of an octopus, the hair on the back of a gibbon’s head, the pattern of feathers on a bird’s neck. He plays with scale: the rear end and tail of a rhinoceros occupy the entire picture frame. We see these as if through a magnifying glass. His pictures challenge us to look more closely, to ask questions and make connections. We think about form and function: the relationship between an elephant’s foot, a horse’s hoof, and our own toes. We ponder modes of sensing and communication: the signals that hold together a school of fish. Examining these photographs, we become scientists and discoverers.
“In some respects, Horenstein’s work continues a centuries-old tradition of natural history illustration in the realm of photography. In natural history illustration, animals are often presented in shallow space with limited landscape, sometimes even against a blank page, in order to promote close examination and study of detail. But as much as these photographs promote scientific inquiry, they are more than scientific illustration. Animals were the subjects of our first art and our first metaphors; and freed from the constraints of space and time, many of Horenstein’s creatures remind us of the lost magical connection between the ‘animal world’ and our own. They are unsettling and they mesmerize. They transcend and transgress familiar boundaries between subject and object. Who is observing whom? The Komodo dragon looks at us with piercing eyes. We’re transfixed by the gaze of the harbor...
Category
1990s Other Art Style Black and White Photography
Materials
Silver Gelatin
Cownose Ray (Rhinoptera bonasus)
By Henry Horenstein
Located in New York, NY
Sepia-toned gelatin silver print
Signed and numbered, verso
24 x 20 inches, sheet
(Edition of 35)
39 x 26 inches, sheet
(Edition of 15)
This photograph is offered by ClampArt, loc...
Category
1990s Other Art Style Black and White Photography
Materials
Silver Gelatin
19th Century Gilt Bronze Candleholders, in the style of Ernest Meissonier
By Jean-Louis-Ernest Meissonier
Located in NICE, FR
We present you with this wonderful and extremely rare pair of candleholders from the late 19th century Napoleon III era, embodying the exceptionally ornamental and dramatic Rococo st...
Category
Antique Late 19th Century French Rococo Candlesticks
Materials
Bronze
Cavendish Church
By John Taylor Arms
Located in Middletown, NY
Etching on cream laid paper with a deckle edge and with an unidentified watermark with an "AL" inside an ovoid cartouche with a garter and buckle (likely English 19th century), 9 1/2...
Category
1940s American Modern Landscape Prints
Materials
Handmade Paper, Etching
En passant (Passing by)
By Louis Legrand
Located in Fairlawn, OH
En passant (Passing by)
Drypoint, 1909
Unsigned (as issued in the deluxe portfolio)
From the album "Les Bars" (8 plates plus cover illustration)
Edition: 30, this state with remarque
Published by Gustav Pellet, Paris
A very rich impression wwith burr
Condition: Excellent
Image/Plate size: 9 7/8 x 6 3/8 inches
Reference: Arwas 391a (remarque)
Exteens 277 i/II
IFF 148 (portfolio)
Louis Auguste Mathieu Legrand (29 September 1863 – 1951) was a French artist, known especially for his aquatint engravings, which were sometimes erotic. He was awarded the Légion d'honneur for his work in 1906.
Life
Legrand was born in the city of Dijon in the east of France. He worked as a bank clerk before deciding to study art part-time at Dijon's Ecole des Beaux-Arts. He won the Devosge prize at the school in 1883.[2] In 1884 Legrand studied engraving under the Belgian printmaker Félicien Rops.
Legrand's artworks include etchings, graphic art and paintings. His paintings featured Parisian social life. Many were of prostitutes, dancers and bar scenes, which featured a sense of eroticism. According to the Hope Gallery, "Louis Legrand is simply one of France's finest early twentieth century masters of etching." His black and white etchings especially provide a sense of decadence; they have been compared to those of Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, though his drawings of the Moulin Rouge, the can-can dance and the young women of Montmartre preceded Toulouse-Lautrec's paintings of similar scenes. He made over three hundred prints of the night life of Paris. They demonstrate "his remarkable powers of observation and are executed with great skill, delicacy, and an ironic sense of humor that pervades them all."
Two of his satirical artworks caused him to be tried for obscenity. The first, "Prostitution" was a symbolic drawing which depicted a naked girl being grasped by a dark monster which had the face of an old woman and claws on its hands; the second, "Naturalism", showed the French novelist Émile Zola minutely studying the thighs of a woman with a magnifying glass. Defended by his friend the lawyer Eugène Rodrigues-Henriques (1853–1928), he was found not guilty in the lower court, but was convicted in the appeal court and then given a short prison sentence for refusing to pay his fine.
Legrand was made famous by his colour illustrations for Gil Blas magazine's coverage of the can-can, with text by Rodrigues (who wrote under the pseudonym Erastene Ramiro). It was a tremendous success, with the exceptional quantity of 60,000 copies of the magazine being printed and instantly sold out in 1891.
In 1892, at the instigation of the publishing house Dentu, Legrand made a set of etchings of his Gil Blas illustrations. The etchings were published in a book, Le Cours de Danse Fin de Siecle (The End of the Century Dance Classes).
Legrand took a holiday in Brittany, which inspired him to engrave a set of fourteen lithographs of simple country life called Au Cap de la Chevre (On Goat Promontory). It was published by Gustave Pellet who became a close friend of Legrand's. Pellet eventually published a total of 300 etchings by Legrand, who was his first artist; he also published Toulouse-Lautrec and Félicien Rops among others.
He did not only work in graphics; he exhibited paintings at the Paris salon of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts starting in 1902. In 1906 he was made a chevalier of the Légion d'honneur.
Legrand died in obscurity in 1951. A retrospective exhibition was held at the Félicien Rops museum in Namur, Belgium in 2006 to celebrate his graphic art. The art collector Victor Arwas published a catalogue raisonné for the occasion.
Books illustrated
de Maupassant, Guy: Cinq Contes Parisiens, 1905.
Poe, Edgar Alan: Quinze Histoires d'Edgar Poe...
Category
Early 1900s Art Nouveau Interior Prints
Materials
Drypoint
Mysteries of the Passion
By Jacques Callot
Located in New York, NY
Jacques Callot (1592-1635), Mysteries of the Passion (Variae Tum Passionis Christi, Tum Vitiae Beatae Mariae Virginis), complete set of 20 etchings plus the frontispiece by Abraham Bosse (Reference Meaume 31). c. 1631. Reference: Lieure 679-698, second state (of 2). In very good condition, archival mounting.
A fine set of these small etchings, printed on 5 plates/sheets of laid paper, with margins, 3 of the plates with partial Crown watermarks (possibly Lieure 45).
The set of 20 etchings includes 7 in circular format, with a diameter of 1 1/4 inches; 7 larger ovals with a length of 1 7/8 inches, and 6 smaller ovals with a length of 1 1/2 inches. These are on 5 plates, with margins outside of the etchings of about 5/8 inches. The frontispiece is 3 1/2 x 3, the sheet 4 1/2 x 4 3/4 inches.
The 20 etchings of the series include:
Plate with 6 Scenes (Lieure 685-690): Ovals: Adoration of the Shepherds, Visitation, Adoration of the Magi; Circles: Descent into Limbo, Descent of the Holy Spirit, Entombment
2 Plate with 4 Scenes Each (Lieure 691-698): Ovals: Annunciation, Christ Among Teachers, Circumcision, Presentation; Circles: Resurrection, Crucifixion, Descent from the Cross, Transfiguration
2 Plates with 3 Oval Scenes Each (Lieure 679-684): Carrying of the Cross, Presentation to the People, Crowning with Thorns, Flagellation, Christ Before Pilate...
Category
1630s Old Masters Figurative Prints
Materials
Etching
Three sample pieces of antique petit point embroidery, around 1900
Located in Stuttgart, DE
3 hand embroidered petit point pieces made for a bag.
1 pocket part for the front or back of the petit point bag and 2 middle parts. Embroidered on ver...
Category
1880s German Evening Bags and Minaudières
Black IP Plated Stainless Steel Lens Gear Necklace
By Tateossian
Located in Fulham business exchange, London
Black IP Plated Stainless Steel Lens Gear Necklace
An edgy men's necklace featuring a small magnifying glass set with a gear-shaped pendant. Our ...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary British More Necklaces
Materials
Stainless Steel, Steel
L
Aieule (The Grandmother)
By Louis Legrand
Located in Fairlawn, OH
L'Aieule (The Grandmother)
Etching and aquatint printed in colors, 1904
Signed with the red stamp of the publisher, Gustave Pellet, Lugt 1193 and numbered (see photo)
Edition: 100 (81/100)
Reference: Arwas 202 iv/IV
IFF 98
Condition: Excellent, the sheet aged as usual
Image size: 14 1/4 x 18 5/8"
Sheet size: 16 15/16 x 24 1/4"
Louis Auguste Mathieu Legrand (29 September 1863 – 1951) was a French artist, known especially for his aquatint engravings, which were sometimes erotic. He was awarded the Légion d'honneur for his work in 1906.
Life
Legrand was born in the city of Dijon in the east of France. He worked as a bank clerk before deciding to study art part-time at Dijon's Ecole des Beaux-Arts. He won the Devosge prize at the school in 1883.[2] In 1884 Legrand studied engraving under the Belgian printmaker Félicien Rops.
Legrand's artworks include etchings, graphic art and paintings. His paintings featured Parisian social life. Many were of prostitutes, dancers and bar scenes, which featured a sense of eroticism. According to the Hope Gallery, "Louis Legrand is simply one of France's finest early twentieth century masters of etching." His black and white etchings especially provide a sense of decadence; they have been compared to those of Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, though his drawings of the Moulin Rouge, the can-can dance and the young women of Montmartre preceded Toulouse-Lautrec's paintings of similar scenes. He made over three hundred prints of the night life of Paris. They demonstrate "his remarkable powers of observation and are executed with great skill, delicacy, and an ironic sense of humor that pervades them all."
Two of his satirical artworks caused him to be tried for obscenity. The first, "Prostitution" was a symbolic drawing which depicted a naked girl being grasped by a dark monster which had the face of an old woman and claws on its hands; the second, "Naturalism", showed the French novelist Émile Zola minutely studying the thighs of a woman with a magnifying glass. Defended by his friend the lawyer Eugène Rodrigues-Henriques (1853–1928), he was found not guilty in the lower court, but was convicted in the appeal court and then given a short prison sentence for refusing to pay his fine.
Legrand was made famous by his colour illustrations for Gil Blas magazine's coverage of the can-can, with text by Rodrigues (who wrote under the pseudonym Erastene Ramiro). It was a tremendous success, with the exceptional quantity of 60,000 copies of the magazine being printed and instantly sold out in 1891.
In 1892, at the instigation of the publishing house Dentu, Legrand made a set of etchings of his Gil Blas illustrations. The etchings were published in a book, Le Cours de Danse Fin de Siecle (The End of the Century Dance Classes).
Legrand took a holiday in Brittany, which inspired him to engrave a set of fourteen lithographs of simple country life called Au Cap de la Chevre (On Goat Promontory). It was published by Gustave Pellet who became a close friend of Legrand's. Pellet eventually published a total of 300 etchings by Legrand, who was his first artist; he also published Toulouse-Lautrec and Félicien Rops among others.
He did not only work in graphics; he exhibited paintings at the Paris salon of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts starting in 1902. In 1906 he was made a chevalier of the Légion d'honneur.
Legrand died in obscurity in 1951. A retrospective exhibition was held at the Félicien Rops museum in Namur, Belgium in 2006 to celebrate his graphic art. The art collector Victor Arwas published a catalogue raisonné for the occasion.
Books illustrated
de Maupassant, Guy: Cinq Contes Parisiens, 1905.
Poe, Edgar Alan: Quinze Histoires d'Edgar Poe...
Category
Early 1900s Art Nouveau Figurative Prints
Materials
Aquatint
Marc Sijan Hyper Realist Contemporary Cast Acrylic Resin Sculpture Portrait Bust
By Marc Sijan
Located in Surfside, FL
A cast acrylic sculpture titled Chin Up by American artist Marc Sijan. This sculpture is made from acrylic and portrays the upper torso of a clothed woman wearing a bandana over her ...
Category
20th Century Photorealist Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Lucite, Acrylic Polymer
La Loge (The Lodge) /// Post-Impressionist Figurative French Paris People Art
By Louis Legrand
Located in Saint Augustine, FL
Artist: Louis LeGrand (French, 1863-1951)
Title: "La Loge (The Lodge)"
Portfolio: Gazette des Beaux-Arts
*Issued unsigned, though signed by LeGrand in the plate (printed signature) l...
Category
Early 1900s Post-Impressionist Figurative Prints
Materials
Drypoint, Etching, Intaglio
Marble and Plexiglass Fusion Bench
By Millim Studio
Located in Roma, IT
The marble becomes an embracing “mother”. The matter withdraws to leave space for another matter. As a magnifying glass, huge transparent cylinders, cross and reveal the heart of mar...
Category
2010s Italian Benches
Materials
Carrara Marble
$23,734 Sale Price
20% Off
Antique ”The Collector” Painting Signed by Navarro
Located in Chicago, IL
Antique ”The Collector” Painting Signed by Navarro
The painting depicts an older, balding man with a long white beard, closely examining a small object with a magnifying glass.
A...
Category
Antique Late 19th Century Art Nouveau Paintings
Materials
Wood
The Magician
By Victoria Goldman
Located in Hudson, NY
Listing is for UNFRAMED print. Inquire within for framing.
Edition of 22.
If the exhibition piece is sold or the customer orders a different print size, the photograph is prod...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Color Photography
The Chariot
By Victoria Goldman
Located in Hudson, NY
Listing is for UNFRAMED print. Inquire within for framing.
Edition of 22.
If the exhibition piece is sold or the customer orders a different print size, the photograph is prod...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Black and White Photography
Mid Twentieth Century Impressionist Watercolour of Gondolas, Grand Canal Venice
Located in ludlow, GB
Mid Twentieth Century Impressionist Watercolour of Gondolas lit by Chines Lanterns on the Grand Canal, Venice.
This is an Unsigned (to the best of my knowledge, I have searched with ...
Category
Mid-20th Century Post-Impressionist Landscape Drawings and Watercolors
Materials
Watercolor
Super Star
By Victoria Goldman
Located in Hudson, NY
Listing is for UNFRAMED print. Inquire within for framing.
Edition of 22.
If the exhibition piece is sold or the customer orders a different print size, the photograph is prod...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Color Photography
The Hermit
By Victoria Goldman
Located in Hudson, NY
Listing is for UNFRAMED print. Inquire within for framing.
Edition of 22.
If the exhibition piece is sold or the customer orders a different print size, the photograph is prod...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Color Photography
The High Priestess
By Victoria Goldman
Located in Hudson, NY
Listing is for UNFRAMED print. Inquire within for framing.
Edition of 22.
If the exhibition piece is sold or the customer orders a different print size, the photograph is prod...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Color Photography
Judgement
By Victoria Goldman
Located in Hudson, NY
Listing is for UNFRAMED print. Inquire within for framing.
Edition of 22.
If the exhibition piece is sold or the customer orders a different print size, the photograph is produced upon purchase. Please allow two weeks for production.
Shipping time depends on method of shipping.
Price is subject to availability. The Robin Rice Gallery reserves the right to adjust this price depending on the current edition of the photograph.
ABOUT:
Victoria Goldman’s twenty-year-long fascination with Tarot has created a series of photographs based on the imagery and the mythology behind the ancient Tarot cards. Each image in the collection is inspired by and named after one of the 22 major archetypes of the Tarot. While photographing and teaching yoga and meditation in India, Hawaii, and throughout Europe, Goldman always made sure to carry a Tarot deck in her backpack. She views Tarot as a tool for personal elevation, helping her direct her focus and better understand her psyche.
The collection’s soft focus and figurative emphasis is reminiscent of the work of Francesca Woodman or Julia Margaret Cameron, whom Goldman cites as personal artistic inspirations. The concept behind the exhibition was long thought-out; while some pieces date as recently as two months prior to the exhibition opening, others date as far back as 1999 or 2000. Shot primarily with vintage Polaroid and film with a twin lens Rolleiflex camera, the dark, moody, mythological images recall a classical tone that mirrors the timelessness of the cards themselves.
The invitational image, entitled “Wheel of Fortune”, depicts a young woman in a glittering gown, her backside facing the viewer and her body positioned to spin a large carnival wheel hidden in the darkness of the photograph. The high-contrast nature of the image abstracts the gown, morphing the glitter on the dress into drops of light that shine through the dark air. The slender young woman in “Fortune” can be found in several of the collection’s photographs, depicting not just Lady Luck, as in the invitational image, but also the Emperor, the Devil, and even the World. Says Goldman, “I chose to use one main model for this show to speak to the fact that all of the characters that Tarot contains are within each one of us.”
This model appears again as the inspiration for “Judgement”, a color portrait portraying the woman surrounded by furs, with a brass crown on her head and a large magnifying glass held against her face. The magnifying glass distorts the model’s delicate features, expanding her nose and bright blue eyes, while sky and tree branches reflect brightly upon the glass itself.
Victoria Goldman has been exhibiting her photography on both a national and international scale for over 25 years. Goldman was born in New York City, attended Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, and has lived in Santa Fe, NM for the last 15 years. Her work has been featured on numerous book and CD covers, and has been published in editorials such as Healthy Living Magazine, Yoga Journal, and The Magazine. Goldman likes to describe her photography as “visual poetry”, referencing Mary Oliver...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Color Photography
Trifari 1960s Gold Plate, Enamel and Rhinestone Vintage Cuff and Earrings Set
By Trifari
Located in Skelmersdale, GB
This eternally stylish jewellery set was created by Trifari in the 1960s.
Condition Report:
Very Good - A tiny element of crazing to the enamel work in a couple of small areas. Th...
Category
Vintage 1960s American Cuff Bracelets
Materials
Gold Plate, Enamel
French Mid Century Modern, Star Sconces, Hammered Brass, Copper, 1960s
By Mark Brazier-Jones
Located in Manhasset, NY
Pair of Brass and Copper Star Sconces, Hand Hammered, Olympia
English, 1960s
A magnificent pair of hand hammered copper and steel Olympia wall sconces each having a starburst frame...
Category
Late 20th Century English Mid-Century Modern Wall Lights and Sconces
Materials
Metal
Bee Orchids, Painting, Watercolor on Watercolor Paper
By Zoe Elizabeth Norman
Located in Yardley, PA
This is a botanical watercolour which I painted using sketches and specimens taken from a protected wild flower meadow in Norfolk. The flowers are very complex and tiny so a magnifyi...
Category
2010s Realist Drawings and Watercolor Paintings
Materials
Watercolor
Table Mirror in Brass by Hans-Agne Jakobsson, 1950
s
By Hans-Agne Jakobsson
Located in Limhamn, Skåne län
Table Mirror in Brass by Hans-Agne Jakobsson, 1950's
Additional Information:
Material: Brass
Style: Mid century, Scandinavian
Produced by Hans-Agne Jakobsson AB in Markaryd, Sweden
...
Category
20th Century Swedish Mid-Century Modern Table Mirrors
Materials
Brass
Jacques Adnet Style Leather Letter Opener
Located in Beverly Hills, CA
Adnet Style leather letter opener with magnifying glass, France 1950's
Camel leather with signature white contrast stitching
Great gift idea!
Category
Vintage 1950s French Letter Openers
Materials
Brass
White-cheeked Spider Monkey (Ateles marginatus)
By Henry Horenstein
Located in New York, NY
Sepia-toned gelatin silver print
Signed and numbered, verso
20 x 24 inches, sheet
(Edition of 35)
26 x 39 inches, sheet
(Edition of 15)
This photograph is offered by ClampArt, located in New York City.
“Horenstein’s creatures are decontextualized. They appear without the backdrop of the natural landscape, outside even the artificial world of the zoo or aquarium, and devoid of their true color. As a consequence, the images are truly arresting; and in both a literal and a metaphorical sense, we see these animals as we have never seen them before. We notice details, and Horenstein focuses our vision on the unexpected: the foot of an elephant, the eye of an octopus, the hair on the back of a gibbon’s head, the pattern of feathers on a bird’s neck. He plays with scale: the rear end and tail of a rhinoceros occupy the entire picture frame. We see these as if through a magnifying glass. His pictures challenge us to look more closely, to ask questions and make connections. We think about form and function: the relationship between an elephant’s foot, a horse’s hoof, and our own toes. We ponder modes of sensing and communication: the signals that hold together a school of fish. Examining these photographs, we become scientists and discoverers.
“In some respects, Horenstein’s work continues a centuries-old tradition of natural history illustration in the realm of photography. In natural history illustration, animals are often presented in shallow space with limited landscape, sometimes even against a blank page, in order to promote close examination and study of detail. But as much as these photographs promote scientific inquiry, they are more than scientific illustration. Animals were the subjects of our first art and our first metaphors; and freed from the constraints of space and time, many of Horenstein’s creatures remind us of the lost magical connection between the ‘animal world’ and our own. They are unsettling and they mesmerize. They transcend and transgress familiar boundaries between subject and object. Who is observing whom? The Komodo dragon looks at us with piercing eyes. We’re transfixed by the gaze of the harbor...
Category
1990s Other Art Style Black and White Photography
Materials
Silver Gelatin
Domestic Great Dane (Canis lupus familiaris)
By Henry Horenstein
Located in New York, NY
Sepia-toned gelatin silver print
Signed and numbered, verso
24 x 20 inches, sheet
(Edition of 35)
39 x 26 inches, sheet
(Edition of 15)
This photograph is offered by ClampArt, located in New York City.
“Horenstein’s creatures are decontextualized. They appear without the backdrop of the natural landscape, outside even the artificial world of the zoo or aquarium, and devoid of their true color. As a consequence, the images are truly arresting; and in both a literal and a metaphorical sense, we see these animals as we have never seen them before. We notice details, and Horenstein focuses our vision on the unexpected: the foot of an elephant, the eye of an octopus, the hair on the back of a gibbon’s head, the pattern of feathers on a bird’s neck. He plays with scale: the rear end and tail of a rhinoceros occupy the entire picture frame. We see these as if through a magnifying glass. His pictures challenge us to look more closely, to ask questions and make connections. We think about form and function: the relationship between an elephant’s foot, a horse’s hoof, and our own toes. We ponder modes of sensing and communication: the signals that hold together a school of fish. Examining these photographs, we become scientists and discoverers.
“In some respects, Horenstein’s work continues a centuries-old tradition of natural history illustration in the realm of photography. In natural history illustration, animals are often presented in shallow space with limited landscape, sometimes even against a blank page, in order to promote close examination and study of detail. But as much as these photographs promote scientific inquiry, they are more than scientific illustration. Animals were the subjects of our first art and our first metaphors; and freed from the constraints of space and time, many of Horenstein’s creatures remind us of the lost magical connection between the ‘animal world’ and our own. They are unsettling and they mesmerize. They transcend and transgress familiar boundaries between subject and object. Who is observing whom? The Komodo dragon looks at us with piercing eyes. We’re transfixed by the gaze of the harbor...
Category
1990s Other Art Style Black and White Photography
Materials
Silver Gelatin
Brown Sea Nettles (Chrysaora fuscescens)
By Henry Horenstein
Located in New York, NY
Sepia-toned gelatin silver print
Signed and numbered, verso
20 x 24 inches, sheet
(Edition of 35)
26 x 39 inches, sheet
(Edition of 15)
This photograph is offered by ClampArt, located in New York City.
“Horenstein’s creatures are decontextualized. They appear without the backdrop of the natural landscape, outside even the artificial world of the zoo or aquarium, and devoid of their true color. As a consequence, the images are truly arresting; and in both a literal and a metaphorical sense, we see these animals as we have never seen them before. We notice details, and Horenstein focuses our vision on the unexpected: the foot of an elephant, the eye of an octopus, the hair on the back of a gibbon’s head, the pattern of feathers on a bird’s neck. He plays with scale: the rear end and tail of a rhinoceros occupy the entire picture frame. We see these as if through a magnifying glass. His pictures challenge us to look more closely, to ask questions and make connections. We think about form and function: the relationship between an elephant’s foot, a horse’s hoof, and our own toes. We ponder modes of sensing and communication: the signals that hold together a school of fish. Examining these photographs, we become scientists and discoverers.
“In some respects, Horenstein’s work continues a centuries-old tradition of natural history illustration in the realm of photography. In natural history illustration, animals are often presented in shallow space with limited landscape, sometimes even against a blank page, in order to promote close examination and study of detail. But as much as these photographs promote scientific inquiry, they are more than scientific illustration. Animals were the subjects of our first art and our first metaphors; and freed from the constraints of space and time, many of Horenstein’s creatures remind us of the lost magical connection between the ‘animal world’ and our own. They are unsettling and they mesmerize. They transcend and transgress familiar boundaries between subject and object. Who is observing whom? The Komodo dragon looks at us with piercing eyes. We’re transfixed by the gaze of the harbor...
Category
1990s Other Art Style Black and White Photography
Materials
Silver Gelatin
Canevas Figurative Sculpture: Contemporary Acrylic Mixed Media Art
By Karine Payette
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Text by Nancy Webb
It’s Saturday night and Karine Payette is in her studio. We meander into a conversation about the dog she used to have and her soft spot for German shepherds, an intensely obedient and loyal breed in a deceivingly wolf-like package. Payette’s most recent series of photographs, sculptures and video work seem to speak directly to this preoccupation with the multifaceted nature of human-animal relationships—the dialogues of control, intimacy, violence and domestication that subtly take place on an interspecies level.
Her workspace is part laboratory, part prop closet—a bowl of fur sits not far from her computer. Somehow in this bright, open, chemical-clean scented room, Payette conjures wildness. We are taken to a strange place, the borderlands of interspecies mingling. At one extreme of the animal-human dynamics scale is the stalwart compliance of a professionally trained German shepherd who responds to commands with robotic precision. Here, power is comfortably held by an off-screen voice, animality pacified by a set of linguistic prompts. At the other end of the scale is a sculpture of a human figure clad in red, sharing a languorous kiss with a wolf. The story of Little Red Riding Hood is immediately called to mind, except that here our hooded protagonist seems to have bailed on grandmother’s orders, instead opting for a forest floor make-out with her canine stalker. This taboo mise-en-scène is a brazen inquiry into the boundaries we maintain with our animal counterparts. Its scale and three-dimensionality contribute to a feeling of immersion that the artist has been courting with her work for the past several years. It feels as though you’ve just walked in on something: you are implicated and your discomfort is like an invisible mist that coats these inanimate beings.
Elsewhere in Payette’s suite of anthropomorphic works, the demarcation between species grows even fainter. A photographic series depicts the slow encroachment of fur, scales and feathers on human skin—a striking process of contamination facilitated by touch. The fusion of flesh, charcoal cat fur and a pale silky dress...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Acrylic, Mixed Media, Silicone
Silver Stallion Wood, Tooled Leather, Polished Steel Desk Clock
By Steven Handelman
Located in Santa Barbara, CA
The Silver Stallion is one of several high end Western themed items produced by Steven Handelman Studios in 2019. The consept was to make something th...
Category
20th Century American American Classical Mantel Clocks
Materials
Iron
New 14k Gold 1.14ctw Bezel Station Princess Diamond by the Yard Chain Necklace
Located in Montclair, NJ
This gorgeous diamond by the yard necklace is newly crafted in solid 14k yellow gold and features cable link chain with 8 bezel settings that carry the stunning diamonds along the ne...
Category
2010s American Chain Necklaces
Materials
Diamond, 14k Gold, Yellow Gold





