etching revival
Etching as an original art form experienced a revival in the period 1850–80, both in France and elsewhere.
A surprising number of artists made original etchings, and a group of fanatical critics and publishers, including Philippe Burty and Alfred Cadart, promoted this type of print in their articles and albums, as the fine-art printmaking technique par excellence.
They joined forces in the Société des Aquafortistes from 1862 to 1867, while in the decade that followed, a new generation of artists began to experiment independently.
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Original versus reproduction
Champions of etching praised the immediacy with which artists could sketch their most intimate thoughts on the etching plate.
Burty promoted the etching as a ‘drawing in several impressions’. As far as its supporters were concerned, this made the technique more artistic than other forms of printing.
The revival was not only a plea for etching as an autonomous art form, therefore, but also a reaction against the popularity of graphic reproduction and photography aimed at the mass market.
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Experimentation
The artistic potential of the etching made it a perfect technique for painters who also wanted to make prints, the peintres-graveurs.
They frequently referred to Rembrandt, who had achieved brilliant effects by printing his own etchings and trying different types of paper.
The fabrication process — la cuisine — was an essential part of the etching revival: experimentation was actually more important in the 1870s than the result.
Artists like Félix Buhot and Edgar Degas combined all sorts of techniques to evoke a special atmosphere.
Further Reading
Gabriel P. Weisberg, The Etching Renaissance in France: 1850-1880, Salt Lake City, 1971.
Elizabeth Helsinger et al., The ‘Writing’ of Modern Life: The Etching Revival in France, Britain, and the U.S., 1850-1940, Chicago, 2008.
Britany Salsbury, ‘The Etching Revival in Nineteenth-Century France’, www.metmuseum.org (accessed september 2014).