Description
THE ANGEL APPEARING TO THE SHEPHERDS by Amand-Durand
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$850.00
THE ANGEL APPEARING TO THE SHEPHERDS by Amand-Durand is an engraving (After Rembrandt). The size of the image is 10 1/16“ X 8 1/2“. The plate mark is 11 1/8“ X9 1/4“ plus full margins. This piece is available framed or unframed and there is no charge for the frame other than the cost of shipping.
Amand-Durand was a noted 19th century engraver. The history and details of Amand-Durand and well know and highly documented.
The Bartsch catalog number is B 44 in the book of Rembrandt etchings. Of all Rembrandt’s etchings, this is considered a much sought after, rare and beautiful plate. This is a beautiful recreation of a Rembrandt etching, originally created in 1634.
This print has been stored in conservation materials, has not been framed or mounted and is like new.
Noted engraver of his time, Amand-Durand spent the major part of his life exactly duplicating the genius of Rembrandt onto copper plates achieving quality through his own technical genius.
Note picture of Amand-Durand.
ABOUT THE ARTIST – (Click on any picture to enlarge it)
Charles Amand-Durand (1831-1905) was an innovative and passionate engraver & artist who resurrected the fading copper & wood plates of various Old Masters from the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries, such as Rembrandt, Albrecht Drurer, Hans Sebald Beham and others. He admired their wood & copper plates, that he noted had faded, through the ravages of time & use, and were no longer producing quality impressions.
Amand-Durand comprehensively researched many public and private collections displaying the Old Masters’ engravings and realized that many of the images would eventually fade completely. He especially admired the works of Rembrandt and scrutinized his plates and techniques.
Rembrandt’s engravings were created in the 1600s, but by the mid 1800s the original plates were in a worn and defective condition. In order to form exact reproductions, he used as his guide, not the worn and flat original copper or wood plates, but the 1st & 2nd state prints of the original works. Durand dedicated a major part of his life to recreating in exact detail the engraved plates of Rembrandt & other old Masters.
Amand-Durand’s re-engravings became so well respected that major collectors & institutions throughout Europe sought to acquire them, including the French Bibliotheque Nationale and the Louvre Museum in Paris.
In 1895 Theo Van Gogh, brother and manager of Vincent Van Gogh stumbled across Amand-Durand’s work. He was so impressed that he sought the artist out. Afterward contacting Vincent to express his enthusiasm for his artistic talents and intellect. Van Gogh was one of the many that recognized Amand-Durand’s talents at the end of the 19th century and beyond.
In 1855, the Conservator of the Cabinet de Estampes, George Duplessis, was so appreciated of the genius of Durand that he had his work published in books by the Bibliotheque Nationale, France. Amand-Durand’s plates were used in an anthology of European engravings, from the 15th to 19th centuries. This publication was beautifully presented and made available at considerable cost to the wider public in 1870.