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À la poupée

À la poupée is a largely historic intaglio printmaking technique for making colour prints by applying different ink colours to a single printing plate using ball-shaped wads of cloth, one for each colour. The paper has just one run through the press, but the inking needs to be carefully re-done after each impression is printed. Each impression usually varies at least slightly, sometimes very significantly.[2]

Frédéric Cazenave after Louis-Léopold Boilly, L'Optique (The Optical Viewer), c. 1793, etching and wash manner, inked à la poupée in black, brown, and green, with additional hand colouring. The son of the revolutionary Georges Danton and his 16-year old stepmother.[1]

Though invented much earlier, the technique became common from the late 17th century into the early 19th century. It was always an alternative to, and often combined with, hand colouring, usually with watercolour and brush.[3] Large areas, such as the sky in landscapes, might be done à la poupée, with more detailed parts hand-coloured.[4] It was used with all the various intaglio printmaking techniques, but tended to be most effective with stipple engraving, "giving a bright and clean look".[5]

The term à la poupée means "with the doll" in French, the "doll" being the wad of cloth, shaped like a ball.[6] The term only came into use after about 1900, with a variety of contemporary terms being used in different languages. In fact, technical descriptions make it clear that the ink was applied with a "stump brush" at least as much as by the "doll".[7] It may be called the "dolly method" in English.[8]

Technique edit

 
Detail of Amor and Psyche, after Simon Vouet, engraving inked à la poupée, with additional hand-colouring (the flesh colour, pink in the robe and Amor's yellow hair), Teyler workshop, 1688–98.[9]

As with a monochrome print in an intaglio technique (such as engraving, etching, mezzotint and aquatint), the ink was spread on the plate (normally copper) and then wiped off the surface, leaving ink only in the lines or other areas below the main level of the plate. This was much more difficult, and slower, when different colours of ink were applied to different areas, requiring what was in effect a painting process rather than just spreading a single colour over the whole plate with what we would call today a squeegee. Where "surface tone" was wanted, not all the ink was wiped off the face of the plate. The high-pressure press pushed the slightly damp paper into these recesses to collect the ink and print the image. To ready the plate for the next impression, it was wiped clean and the whole process was repeated. Presumably the printer normally worked off a model, probably in watercolour.[10]

Unusually for a significant artist, Mary Cassatt did the inking for her famous group of 1891 herself, and found printing 25 impressions of ten prints, with the help of a professional printer, "a great work ... Sometimes we worked all day (eight hours) both as hard as we could work and only printed eight or ten proofs in the day".[11]

The technique varied somewhat; an account based on a 19th-century Parisian practice said a fairly light "ground tint, usually brown black or grey" was applied first, all over except for flesh areas, giving a "slight tone" which "dominated the picture".[12] But the leading early practitioner Johannes Teyler for one did not do this, inking purely linear plates in different colours, risking that, according to Antony Griffiths, the results "look very odd".[13] Later printmakers generally used à la poupée inking with techniques that gave tone rather than just line, such as stipple engraving, mezzotint and aquatint. It was commonly used with mezzotint plates that had begun to wear out (as they rather quickly did) to disguise this, although this is not always the case, as some proof impressions use it.[14]

History edit

 
Elisha Kirkall, Heroic Stormy Landscape, mezzotint and etching printed à la poupée in two colours, after Jan van Huysum, 1724

The earliest known example of the technique is an impression of a religious engraving of about 1525 by Agostino Veneziano, where the Virgin and Child are printed in red, and the surrounding saints and background in blue. When this was printed is uncertain. Other early uses of the technique, many decades later, are to colour illustrated title pages of books otherwise illustrated in black and white. The earliest title page to use this was the Architectura of Wendel Dietterlin, with various Nuremberg editions from 1593 to 1598; this was a heavily-illustrated and very influential book on architectural ornament.[15]

The revival in interest in the technique about a century later was due to the Dutch artist (among various other professions) Johannes Teyler, who in 1688 received a patent for the technique and financed a Dutch workshop to produce prints in the technique.[16] This was not very long-lived; over about ten years, the workshop produced over 800 different prints using up to eight colours. These were mostly of decorative subjects of all the various types of the day, but included reproductive prints of old masters, more often French than Dutch or Italian.[17] The technique was soon taken up by others, especially in the Netherlands, and later France. From about 1695, a number of Amsterdam publishers began putting out prints in the technique.[18]

The first published description of the technique is in the 3rd edition of 1745 of the manual on etching by the French artist Abraham Bosse, De la manière de graver à l'eaux-forte et au burin..., first published a century earlier.[19]

In the second half of the 18th century the technique began to be used to colour more elaborate prints that were also issued in monochrome,[20] the coloured impressions being much more expensive, and probably intended for framing.[21] Considerably different colour schemes across different impressions of some prints suggest that at times coloured versions were pulled individually for a specific order.[22] In England, Elisha Kirkall was an early user, in mezzotints of the 1720s, and Robert Laurie, an engraver of maps and other subjects later in the century, extended the number of colours that were used, helping to make the technique fashionable again.[23]

 
Mary Cassatt, The Fitting, 1890, drypoint and aquatint, inked à la poupée by the artist herself.

Towards the end of the century, the Italian Francesco Bartolozzi and his followers made much use of it, and in France it was used for the illustrations to luxury scientific books, culminating in those of the botanical illustrator Pierre-Joseph Redouté, such as his Les Roses (1817–24).[24] Redouté had the many artists working from his watercolours print them with inking à la poupée and then hand-colour details where necessary.[25]

As other, cheaper, methods of colour printing developed in the mid-19th century, the usage of à la poupée declined. But at the end of the century, a set of ten prints by Mary Cassatt was an early example of the technique being applied individually by a significant artist, rather than a printshop worker following a painted model. She used drypoint, etching and aquatint and colour applied à la poupée. The prints were influenced by Japanese woodblock prints, especially those of Utamaru, which were made using complicated multiple blocks.[26] Peter Ilsted also used the technique, mainly with mezzotint.[27] and the French printmaker Manuel Robbe used it with aquatint.[28] Various later artists have used the technique at times.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Impression in the Rijksmuseum
  2. ^ Gascoigne, 26a; Griffiths, 117
  3. ^ Gascoigne, 26a; Griffiths, 117
  4. ^ Gascoigne, 26a
  5. ^ Gascoigne, 26a
  6. ^ . National Gallery of Art. Archived from the original on February 21, 2015. Retrieved March 25, 2015.
  7. ^ Stijnman and Savage, 46–47
  8. ^ Portland Art Museum, Glossary
  9. ^ The whole print. There is also a light black or grey wash, seen on Psyche's hair.
  10. ^ Lambert, 88, 97; Griffiths, 31–34 on "normal" intaglio printmaking
  11. ^ Ives, 45–46
  12. ^ Lambert, 88 (quoted), 97
  13. ^ Griffiths, 119
  14. ^ Griffiths, 119; Lambert, 102
  15. ^ Stijnman and Savage, 43
  16. ^ Stijnman and Savage, 43
  17. ^ Les estampes en couleurs de Johannes Teyler, INHA, Paris
  18. ^ Stijnman and Savage, 45–46
  19. ^ Stijnman and Savage, 43
  20. ^ Lambert, 101, her 82A and B show monochome and colour impressions of the same print
  21. ^ Griffiths, 118
  22. ^ Lambert, 102
  23. ^ Griffiths, 118
  24. ^ Grove, 557
  25. ^ Grove; "Redoute, Les Roses, Antique Prints, Paris, 1817–24", George Glazer Gallery
  26. ^ Ives, 45–54
  27. ^ The National Museum of Western Art, The Dining Room at Liselund, 1917
  28. ^ "Manuel Robbe", Galerie Maximillian

References edit

  • Gascoigne, Bamber. How to Identify Prints: A Complete Guide to Manual and Mechanical Processes from Woodcut to Inkjet, 1986 (2nd Edition, 2004), Thames & Hudson, ISBN 050023454X. Uses section numbers rather than page numbers.
  • Griffiths, Antony, Prints and Printmaking, British Museum Press (in UK), 2nd edn, 1996 ISBN 071412608X
  • "Grove", The Grove Encyclopedia of Materials and Techniques in Art, ed. Gerald W. R. Ward, 2008, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0195313917, 9780195313918, google books
  • Ives, Colta Feller, The Great Wave: The Influence of Japanese Woodcuts on French Prints, 1974, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, ISBN 0-87099-098-5
  • Lambert, Susan, The Image Multiplied; Five centuries of printed reproductions of paintings and drawings, 1987, Trefoil Publications, London, ISBN 0862940966
  • Stijnman, Ad, Savage, Elizabeth, Printing Colour 1400–1700: History, Techniques, Functions and Receptions, 2015 BRILL, ISBN 9004290117, 9789004290112, google books

poupée, largely, historic, intaglio, printmaking, technique, making, colour, prints, applying, different, colours, single, printing, plate, using, ball, shaped, wads, cloth, each, colour, paper, just, through, press, inking, needs, carefully, done, after, each. A la poupee is a largely historic intaglio printmaking technique for making colour prints by applying different ink colours to a single printing plate using ball shaped wads of cloth one for each colour The paper has just one run through the press but the inking needs to be carefully re done after each impression is printed Each impression usually varies at least slightly sometimes very significantly 2 Frederic Cazenave after Louis Leopold Boilly L Optique The Optical Viewer c 1793 etching and wash manner inked a la poupee in black brown and green with additional hand colouring The son of the revolutionary Georges Danton and his 16 year old stepmother 1 Though invented much earlier the technique became common from the late 17th century into the early 19th century It was always an alternative to and often combined with hand colouring usually with watercolour and brush 3 Large areas such as the sky in landscapes might be done a la poupee with more detailed parts hand coloured 4 It was used with all the various intaglio printmaking techniques but tended to be most effective with stipple engraving giving a bright and clean look 5 The term a la poupee means with the doll in French the doll being the wad of cloth shaped like a ball 6 The term only came into use after about 1900 with a variety of contemporary terms being used in different languages In fact technical descriptions make it clear that the ink was applied with a stump brush at least as much as by the doll 7 It may be called the dolly method in English 8 Contents 1 Technique 2 History 3 Notes 4 ReferencesTechnique edit nbsp Detail of Amor and Psyche after Simon Vouet engraving inked a la poupee with additional hand colouring the flesh colour pink in the robe and Amor s yellow hair Teyler workshop 1688 98 9 As with a monochrome print in an intaglio technique such as engraving etching mezzotint and aquatint the ink was spread on the plate normally copper and then wiped off the surface leaving ink only in the lines or other areas below the main level of the plate This was much more difficult and slower when different colours of ink were applied to different areas requiring what was in effect a painting process rather than just spreading a single colour over the whole plate with what we would call today a squeegee Where surface tone was wanted not all the ink was wiped off the face of the plate The high pressure press pushed the slightly damp paper into these recesses to collect the ink and print the image To ready the plate for the next impression it was wiped clean and the whole process was repeated Presumably the printer normally worked off a model probably in watercolour 10 Unusually for a significant artist Mary Cassatt did the inking for her famous group of 1891 herself and found printing 25 impressions of ten prints with the help of a professional printer a great work Sometimes we worked all day eight hours both as hard as we could work and only printed eight or ten proofs in the day 11 The technique varied somewhat an account based on a 19th century Parisian practice said a fairly light ground tint usually brown black or grey was applied first all over except for flesh areas giving a slight tone which dominated the picture 12 But the leading early practitioner Johannes Teyler for one did not do this inking purely linear plates in different colours risking that according to Antony Griffiths the results look very odd 13 Later printmakers generally used a la poupee inking with techniques that gave tone rather than just line such as stipple engraving mezzotint and aquatint It was commonly used with mezzotint plates that had begun to wear out as they rather quickly did to disguise this although this is not always the case as some proof impressions use it 14 History edit nbsp Elisha Kirkall Heroic Stormy Landscape mezzotint and etching printed a la poupee in two colours after Jan van Huysum 1724 The earliest known example of the technique is an impression of a religious engraving of about 1525 by Agostino Veneziano where the Virgin and Child are printed in red and the surrounding saints and background in blue When this was printed is uncertain Other early uses of the technique many decades later are to colour illustrated title pages of books otherwise illustrated in black and white The earliest title page to use this was the Architectura of Wendel Dietterlin with various Nuremberg editions from 1593 to 1598 this was a heavily illustrated and very influential book on architectural ornament 15 The revival in interest in the technique about a century later was due to the Dutch artist among various other professions Johannes Teyler who in 1688 received a patent for the technique and financed a Dutch workshop to produce prints in the technique 16 This was not very long lived over about ten years the workshop produced over 800 different prints using up to eight colours These were mostly of decorative subjects of all the various types of the day but included reproductive prints of old masters more often French than Dutch or Italian 17 The technique was soon taken up by others especially in the Netherlands and later France From about 1695 a number of Amsterdam publishers began putting out prints in the technique 18 The first published description of the technique is in the 3rd edition of 1745 of the manual on etching by the French artist Abraham Bosse De la maniere de graver a l eaux forte et au burin first published a century earlier 19 In the second half of the 18th century the technique began to be used to colour more elaborate prints that were also issued in monochrome 20 the coloured impressions being much more expensive and probably intended for framing 21 Considerably different colour schemes across different impressions of some prints suggest that at times coloured versions were pulled individually for a specific order 22 In England Elisha Kirkall was an early user in mezzotints of the 1720s and Robert Laurie an engraver of maps and other subjects later in the century extended the number of colours that were used helping to make the technique fashionable again 23 nbsp Mary Cassatt The Fitting 1890 drypoint and aquatint inked a la poupee by the artist herself Towards the end of the century the Italian Francesco Bartolozzi and his followers made much use of it and in France it was used for the illustrations to luxury scientific books culminating in those of the botanical illustrator Pierre Joseph Redoute such as his Les Roses 1817 24 24 Redoute had the many artists working from his watercolours print them with inking a la poupee and then hand colour details where necessary 25 As other cheaper methods of colour printing developed in the mid 19th century the usage of a la poupee declined But at the end of the century a set of ten prints by Mary Cassatt was an early example of the technique being applied individually by a significant artist rather than a printshop worker following a painted model She used drypoint etching and aquatint and colour applied a la poupee The prints were influenced by Japanese woodblock prints especially those of Utamaru which were made using complicated multiple blocks 26 Peter Ilsted also used the technique mainly with mezzotint 27 and the French printmaker Manuel Robbe used it with aquatint 28 Various later artists have used the technique at times nbsp Dutch a la poupee print in three colours of a tulip c 1690s Workshop of Johannes Teyler nbsp Title page of Johannes Teyler s Verscheyde soorte van miniatuur 1693 Rosenwald Collection Library of Congress nbsp Alpheus and Arethusa 1655 1690 Abraham Bloteling after Jan van Neck nbsp Vase with flowers 4 colours a la poupee with additional hand colouring Teyler workshop 1688 98 nbsp Anne Allen after Jean Baptiste Pillement etching Chinese Arabesque with a Boat early 1760s nbsp Pierre Joseph Redoute plate from Les Roses Rosa cinnamomea 1817 with hand colouringNotes edit Impression in the Rijksmuseum Gascoigne 26a Griffiths 117 Gascoigne 26a Griffiths 117 Gascoigne 26a Gascoigne 26a Colorful impressions Techniques National Gallery of Art Archived from the original on February 21 2015 Retrieved March 25 2015 Stijnman and Savage 46 47 Portland Art Museum Glossary The whole print There is also a light black or grey wash seen on Psyche s hair Lambert 88 97 Griffiths 31 34 on normal intaglio printmaking Ives 45 46 Lambert 88 quoted 97 Griffiths 119 Griffiths 119 Lambert 102 Stijnman and Savage 43 Stijnman and Savage 43 Les estampes en couleurs de Johannes Teyler INHA Paris Stijnman and Savage 45 46 Stijnman and Savage 43 Lambert 101 her 82A and B show monochome and colour impressions of the same print Griffiths 118 Lambert 102 Griffiths 118 Grove 557 Grove Redoute Les Roses Antique Prints Paris 1817 24 George Glazer Gallery Ives 45 54 The National Museum of Western Art The Dining Room at Liselund 1917 Manuel Robbe Galerie MaximillianReferences editGascoigne Bamber How to Identify Prints A Complete Guide to Manual and Mechanical Processes from Woodcut to Inkjet 1986 2nd Edition 2004 Thames amp Hudson ISBN 050023454X Uses section numbers rather than page numbers Griffiths Antony Prints and Printmaking British Museum Press in UK 2nd edn 1996 ISBN 071412608X Grove The Grove Encyclopedia of Materials and Techniques in Art ed Gerald W R Ward 2008 Oxford University Press ISBN 0195313917 9780195313918 google books Ives Colta Feller The Great Wave The Influence of Japanese Woodcuts on French Prints 1974 The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 0 87099 098 5 Lambert Susan The Image Multiplied Five centuries of printed reproductions of paintings and drawings 1987 Trefoil Publications London ISBN 0862940966 Stijnman Ad Savage Elizabeth Printing Colour 1400 1700 History Techniques Functions and Receptions 2015 BRILL ISBN 9004290117 9789004290112 google books nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to A la poupee Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A la poupee amp oldid 1192203592, 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