Laburnums and Battersea

Description

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.

Laburnums and Battersea

Theodore Roussel

1889/90 and 1898

Accession Number

210939

Medium

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

Dimensions

Image/plate: 34.2 × 22.1 cm (13 1/2 × 8 3/4 in.); Sheet: 42.1 × 27.2 cm (16 5/8 × 10 3/4 in.)

Classification

etching

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Meg and Mark Hausberg