Monday, 22 June 2026

Adolphe Appian, “Avant la Pluie, Village de Villeneuve”, 1869

Adolphe Appian (also known as Jacques Barthélemy Appian) (1818–1898)

“Avant la Pluie, Village de Villeneuve” (Before the Rain, Village of Villeneuve), 1869

Technical Details & Condition:

Etching on tissue-thin buff-coloured Japanese laid paper, with generously wide margins. It is an exceptionally rare proof-state impression before lettering for publication. The sheet bears a pencil inscription by an unknown hand along the lower edge (recto) providing details of the title and artist. 

The impression is strong and well-printed—a flawless proof! Aside from the pencil inscription, the sheet is in pristine condition, free of tears, holes, folds, abrasions, stains, or handling marks..

Dimensions:

• Sheet (slightly uneven): 28.9 x 39.8 cm
• Platemark (soft): 16 x 22.8 cm
• Image borderline: 12.3 x 21.1 cm

In-Plate Lettering:

• Upper left corner: “APPIA[N] 1889”

References:

Curtis & Prouté 28 i (Atherton Cutiis & Paul Prouté, “Adolphe Appian son Oeuvre Gravé et Lithographié”, 1968, Paris, Paul Prouté, [n.p.] cat. no. 28 i)
• Jennings 25 (Herbert H Jennings, Adolphe Appian (essay) in “Print Collector’s Quarterly,” vol. 12, 1925, no. 1, p. 115, cat. no. 25)—see https://digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/diglit/print_collectors_quarterly1925/0134/scroll (scroll to find the page 115)

Philip Gilbert Hamerton’s insight:

In Hamerton’s 1876 edition of “Etching and Etchers”, he offers the following insights about Appian’s work:“…his [Appian’s] work is that each plate, however large or however small it may be, is conceived from the first as a whole, and the first conception is never departed from for the disproportionate realisation of some obtrusive detail.” Further: “…Appian sees always in masses, and gives quite as much detail as is consistent with the preservation of the mass” (pp. 202–03)

Price & Shipping:

AU$316 (approximately US$221.32 / €193.19 / £167.59), including worldwide express shipping. Import duties and taxes (if any) are the buyer’s responsibility.

To acquire this exceptionally rare and beautiful proof-state impression by an artist with a strong personal vision of his surroundings and a close connection with the Barbizon School, please contact oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com. Secure payment is handled via PayPal invoice for a smooth, protected transaction.

This print has been sold



















Saturday, 20 June 2026

Maison Bouasse-Lebel, “Sufferings of Jesus”, c. 1859


Widow Eulalie Bouasse-Lebel and Eldest Son (active partnership 1853–1864)

“Sufferings of Jesus”, printed in Paris, circa 1859—an antique French holy card, also widely known as a mechanical paper lace prayer card (canivet mécanique) featuring a printed prayer verso.

This holy card can be securely dated between 1853 and 1864 based on the documented publishing partnership of the widow Bouasse-Lebel and her eldest son at the historic printery address shown on the lower edge of the recto image: “Vve Bouasse Lebel et Fils aîné edit imp. 29 Rue St. Sulpice a Paris”.

Technical Details & Condition:

The card is composed of a central steel-engraved image featuring the head of Jesus Christ crowned with Thorns (recto) and a typography prayer (verso). The central text and image are integrated within an outer frame of exceptionally fine, embossed mechanical paper lace designed to perfectly replicate classical hand-cut lacework.

The prayer lettered in French on the reverse side translates as:
“He who applies himself to meditate often on the sufferings of Jesus Christ cannot refuse him his heart. He draws from this salutary exercise the horror of sin and true love.”

Aside from a small loss on the upper left corner and minor pale aging stains, the holy card is in very good condition for its age and the delicate nature of its fragile paper structure.

Dimensions:

• Sheet: 9.7 x 6.3 cm
• Engraved image:
4.2 x 3.7 cm

In-Plate Lettering:

• Recto along lower edge: “Vve Bouasse Lebel et Fils aìné edit imp. 29 Rue St. Sulpice a Paris”
• Verso: “Celui qui s'ap / plique à méditer / souvent les souf- / frances de Jésus-Christ, / ne peut lui refuser son / cœur. Il puise dans / ce salutaire exercice / L’horreur du pé- / ché et le véri- / table amour. / Maison Vve Bouasse-Lebel / Paris 583” (Note: The number 583 corresponds to the specific model or catalogue series number assigned by the publisher).

References:

University of Dayton: https://archivescatalog.udayton.edu/repositories/2/resources/330
• Wikidata (Bouasse-Lebel): https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q894945 
• École des Chartes (Dictionnaire des Imprimeurs): http://elec.enc.sorbonne.fr/imprimeurs/node/21913
 

Price & Shipping:

AU$226 (approximately US$158.55 / €138.24 / £119.78), including worldwide express shipping. Import duties and taxes (if any) are the buyer’s responsibility.

To acquire this rare 19th-century French mechanical lace holy card, please contact oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com. Secure payment is handled via PayPal invoice for a smooth, protected transaction.









Friday, 19 June 2026

Jan Sadeler I, “Noah Building the Ark”, 1586 (2nd copy)

Jan Sadeler I (also known as Johannes Sadeler and Johann Sadeler) (1550–1600)

“Noah Building the Ark” (also known as “Construction of the Ark”), 1586

Technical Details & Condition:

Engraving on laid paper (with watermark) with small margins.

This is twelfth from the series of fifteen plates (including the title plate; New Hollstein 41–55), “The Story of the Family of Seth” (also known as “Bonorum et Malorum Consensio” or “The Knowledge of Good and Evil”), after a lost drawing by Maarten de Vos (also known as Marten de Vos and Maerten de Vos) (1532–1603), published by Jan Sadeler I in Antwerp.

It is an impression from the second of two states, with the addition of the plate number (“XII”) at the centre of the upper edge. As inscribed in the plate (“Genes; cap: 6.”), the scene depicts Chapter 6 of the Book of Genesis, where Noah follows divine instructions to build an ark (see verses 14–16). 

The impression is strong, crisp, and well-printed—near faultless. Aside from a small mark left of centre and another in the sky at upper left, the sheet is in excellent condition, free of tears, holes, folds, abrasions, or significant stains.

Dimensions:

• Sheet: 21.6 x 28.5 cm
• Platemark:
20.4 x 27.1 cm
• Image borderline:
19.1 x 27 cm

In-Plate Lettering:

• Upper edge at centre: “XII”
• Along lower edge within the image border (from left to right): (
on anvil):“Sadelerus / auct; scal”; (centre) “Genes; cap: 6.”; (right) “M. de vos figur:”
• Below the image in two columns of Latin: “
Nec mora continuo exequitur Noe iussa tonantis / Materies abiegnus erat fortissimus asser. // Sic qui feruenti Christum veneratur amore, / Permanet incolumis curis neq[ue] subiacet ullis”

References:

TIB 70. 040 S2 (Isabelle de Ramaix, “The Illustrated Bartsch”, vol. 70, Part 1 [Supplement], 1999, Abaris Books, p. 61); Nagler 1835 1835–52, no. 20; Le Blanc, no. 40; Wurzbach, no. 9.12; Hollstein 1980, vol. 21, no. 40; Edquist, p. 14, no. 18b; Ramaix 1992, no. 29
• Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando (RABASF): https://www.academiacolecciones.com/estampas/inventario.php?id=C-47-010a
• Rijksmuseum: https://id.rijksmuseum.nl/200247628
• British Museum: https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/P_1959-0221-11-12

Price & Shipping:

AU$306 (approximately US$214.68 / €187.18 / £162.18), including worldwide express shipping. Import duties and taxes (if any) are the buyer’s responsibility.

To acquire this graphically powerful and superbly executed engraving by one of the most renowned of the Flemish old masters, please contact oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com. Secure payment is handled via PayPal invoice for a smooth, protected transaction.

This print has been sold