19th Century Etchings & Illustrations | the Fashion Spot

19th Century Etchings & Illustrations

Scott

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Not really sure how to explain it,but I absolutely adore this period....primarily the intricacy on a merely b&w foundation. Most of the best were of course English and German and found in literary novices.

Here's a couple to start the thread up-

old_english_baron1.jpg
old_english_baron2.jpg


(IMAGES LITGOTHIC.COM)
 
an illustration from Mary Shelley's original 'Frankenstein'
Frank1.jpg


(IMAGE LIBRARY OF UCLA)
 
is illustration in that period different from etchings? Just wondering because it looks the same but often referred differently.
 
love the gothic imagery scott...:flower:
 
^yup. funny how the first I post are of the darker variation :D
 
I have a lot of etchings saved (particularly sketches of scenes from shakespeare) but I don't know the sites I got them from. Lol so I'll search the net and hopefully come across the source so I can post them with credits

And brilliant topic and pics, Scott! :woot:
 
Oh thanks,Tiffany....looking forward to your contribution,indefinitely :D
 
very nice idea for a thread, scott! i'd say that there's a difference in expression with etchings or illustration in general, because etchings tend to look more 'sharp' and darker....?
but i'm having (english) terminology problems right now, i'm not sure wether an etching is a 'stich' or 'radierung'... i got to find out before i post here:unsure:
 
Thanks Anna!

I agree about the sharpness,now that you mention it. Because there was one I saw that was described as an etching and it was really graphic and bold. Maybe I could just change the title to include both respects because that entire period was wonderful?

And I think etching is indeed the act of marks...a little bit like mark-making in a way.
 
great topic, scott!!


my favorite is francisco goya.

The sleep of reason produces monsters

Goya_Cap_D80_Sleep_Reason.jpg


The series Los Caprichos is probably Goya's best known. Comprising eighty plates, Goya privately published the series, which was first advertised for sale in the Spanish newspaper Diario de Madrid in 1799 as being a criticism of "human errors and vices," although the subjects are often obscure and interpretation purposely difficult. Lampooning both political and religious figures, Goya soon found it diplomatic to present the original plates to the king for his Calcografia, in exchange for a pension for his son.
The Sleep of Reason is a self-portrait of the artist, surrounded by demonic-looking animals. It was intended as the frontispiece for the series, but Goya soon thought better of this, probably because the subject related too closely to two plates in Rousseau's 1793 Paris edition of Philosophie at a time when the very name of Rousseau was anathema to religious and political leaders in Spain. Instead, Goya created another, more traditional, self-portrait as the frontispiece and buried The Sleep of Reason well within the series, as plate 43.
In Los Caprichos Goya begins to push the boundaries of the intaglio process to achieve a sense of ambiguous space coupled with a modernist sensibility. This series grew out of Goya's developing sense of isolation, the result of a protracted illness he suffered in 1792­93, leaving him totally deaf. This, along with his difficult position as court painter to King Carlos IV at a time when he was becoming increasingly dedicated to the cause of the Spanish peasants, left him feeling compromised. Relying on a variety of influences, Los Caprichos served as a coded expression of the artist's growing involvement in Madrid's political milieu.

from http://www.museum.cornell.edu/HFJ/handbook/hb128.html



Disasters of War

goya_lg.jpg


Goya's series of etchings represent the horrors of the Napoleonic invasion of Spain in 1808 during which French soldiers brutally tortured the Spanish peasants and the Spanish responded with their own acts of cruelty. Goya's series of etchings, Disasters of War inspired Jake and Dinos Chapman's work of art by the same title.

from www.tate.org.uk/.../ ima/rm6/wif/context_img.htm
 
[font=Arial,Helvetica][size=-1]Caprichos-Plate 48: Tale-Bearers: Blasts of wind[/size][/font]


goya-capricho48.jpg


www.medizin.fu-berlin.de/. ../beethoven.htm

what i love about him is his ability to depict his subject with scathing honesty, his illustrations twists humans into caricatures of themselves. if you look at the way he paints the eyes, you can see them watching you. sometimes he would go as far as depicting the aristocratic families he was commissoned to paint as if they were inbreds. he was no tool.
 
grrr, travolta :ninja: i wanted to post the goya ones:lol:
they are incredible, no? so haunting....

i'm fine with changing the title, scott.
 
i love goya too!
and albrecht durer, and fritz eichenberg!

this is my favorite eichenberg
3am251.jpg

from tfaoi.com
 
:heart: Eichenberg,.Francesca! :woot:

Those are also excellent,Travolta! Amazingly beautiful and haunting,indeed ;)
 
this type of work floors me. it's so amazing!

i know that edward gorey isn't in this exact school, but the simple black and white line drawings are similar execution and feeling.

ZGorey301.JPG

my favorite christmas cards!
 

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