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A work made of etching and drypoint in brown, with selective wiping of plate tone, on cream japanese paper.

Laburnums and Battersea

1889/90 and 1898

Theodore Roussel French, worked in England, 1847-1926

England

For his early prints, Roussel adapted James McNeill Whistler’s methods to express his own interest in documenting the local scene, and Laburnums and Battersea is a striking example of the older artist’s influence. Roussel developed his plate through multiple states, used a variety of ink colors, and employed selective wiping to suggest differing effects of light, water, and mist. He also chose an upright format and a larger scale than his other prints depicting Chelsea and the Battersea factories on the opposite bank of the Thames River.

Etching and drypoint in brown, with selective wiping of plate tone, on cream Japanese paper

Prints and Drawings