Browse Items (54 total)

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Over the last fifty years, this has become the most widely collected Buhot print in the United States, in part because of the wide availability of the published editions. This impression, however, is one of the rare, exceptionally brilliant proof…

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The scene depicts the return of the artists to the Champs-Elysées on the evening of the final day for sending paintings to the 1877 Salon, either on March 20, at 6 PM, according to the inscription in the image, or on March 21, according to a second…

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Familiarly known as “The Cab Stand,” this was Buhot’s most famous image for many years, reproduced in virtually every book on nineteenth-century etching. It went through many states and numerous printings as well as a counterfeit reproduction.…

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The subject matter presented here is typical of the French nineteenth-century landscape painter Eugène Boudin, whose work Buhot admired. However, this image is not based on any Boudin painting or sketch; it is Buhot’s original conception. The…

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Jacques Cazotte’s novel The Devil in Love, written in 1772, was the precursor of all modern fantastic stories. It tells of a young Spanish nobleman with whom the devil falls in love and tries to seduce in the guise of a beautiful woman, and blends…

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Jacques Cazotte’s novel The Devil in Love, written in 1772, was the precursor of all modern fantastic stories. It tells of a young Spanish nobleman with whom the devil falls in love and tries to seduce in the guise of a beautiful woman, and blends…

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Jacques Cazotte’s novel The Devil in Love, written in 1772, was the precursor of all modern fantastic stories. It tells of a young Spanish nobleman with whom the devil falls in love and tries to seduce in the guise of a beautiful woman, and blends…

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The etching is one of many illustrations Buhot made for fantastic novels by Jules Barbey d’Aurevilly. Even though the plate would eventually be cut down to feature just the main subject for the book, we can see that Buhot could not resist the…

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The first part of the title refers to a section of poems in Charles Baudelaire’s Les Fleurs du mal; the second part is simply descriptive. The etching is based on a painting of 1876 and is realized in reverse. The cab is engulfed in darkness, and…

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Buhot rarely made prints of generic landscape, generally preferring to etch and interpret actual scenes known to him. This print stands out in his work for its anonymity of place and its execution, in which detail is largely obscured in the depth of…

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This scene is in Quinéville, a coastal village in Normandy near Buhot’s hometown of Valognes, where there was a fort that required regular patrol by a watchman. Buhot did a related oil painting of the subject in the same year, of much greater…

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Valognes is seen down its main street, the rue de Fantasie (now boulevard Félix Buhot), looking towards the Church of Saint-Malo. The streets are wet, the umbrellas are out, as are the dogs, and it is a typical day in a small Norman village. It is…

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This impression, in black, was intended as a design for the back cover of the portfolio Buhot published in 1883 under the title Japonisme. It consisted of ten etchings after Japanese art objects from the collection of Philippe Burty, the French…

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Buhot made a number of prints after paintings by others, usually for commercial ends—as images, for example, to be included in a book or catalogue. It was a way of making money for a young artist. This print, however, is not among them. It is,…

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When still in the possession of the artist’s widow, this unusual work was listed as a drawing. It is, however, a painting on canvas in an unusual technique, apparently invented by Edgar Degas, called peinture à l’essence, in which the oil is…

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This little painting, unsigned and of unknown date but authenticated by the artist’s son Jean, is a clear example that Buhot could paint in an Impressionist style. Not that he frequently did, but he could. Buhot’s paintings are rather remarkable…

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Comparison of two impressions (the first and final state) reveals how completely distinct they are, as if two different artists, working side by side, interpreted the same scene. With the addition of etching and more detail, the final plate becomes a…

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Funeral Procession is the only one of Buhot’s etchings destined from the beginning to be a color print, even though a number of his plates were at times printed in various colors. The coloring here is meant less for lifelike representation than for…

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This counterproof was made by laying a clean sheet atop a freshly printed impression and passing both through the press. It was created as a cul-de-lampe or tailpiece for an article on Buhot by Octave Uzanne, published in the journal Le Livre in…

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With the addition of large, intimidating birds in the sky, a darkening of the image, and brightening of the highlights, the scene becomes a surreal phantasmagoria, tempting the viewer to regard the print as an allegory of life and its dangers. In…
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