Browse Items (7 total)

Cemetery of Valognes_crop.jpg
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 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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In this second state (in the third state the plate is cancelled, signaling the end of its use by the artist), Buhot changes the image into a true night scene. The complex of techniques, particularly the stop-out (the use of varnish to prevent an area…

Street in Valognes.jpg
Numerous studies exist for an etching of the same title and composition, all realized, as might be expected, in reverse of the print. This drawing, executed in the same orientation as the etching, was thus likely completed by Buhot as an independent…

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The image is often described as Buhot’s most charming print, a portrayal of the archetypical French couple heading home in a rainstorm under a single umbrella. Buhot added detailed margins to the left, reflecting what might be found within the…

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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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