Before going into the value of charcoal as a medium in the recording of the
various aspects of nature in black-and-white, it will be wise to review the
several mediums in general use, namely, etching, pen and ink, lithographic
crayon, and charcoal gray in connection with Chinese white; it will be well,
also, to note the various mechanical processes in use for the reproductions of
these drawings on white paper.
Those of you who have seen the early illustration in Harper's Magazine
of the late fifties will recall the work of "Porte Crayon" (Colonel Strother),
drawn on wood by the artist and engraved by such men as A. V. S. Anthony and
John Sartain. You will also recall how some twenty-five years later an effective
and marvellous
change took place in the quality of these reproductions,oil paintings, being by far the most
unique and rapid in the history of any art of the century. In less than ten
years, between 1876 and 1886, came this sudden awakening to the necessity of
better work from the burin, followed by an enormous commercial demand for such
results, until by common consent the American engraver first rivalled and then
surpassed the world. If we search for the cause we find that, like many other
inventions developing others of still greater importance, as the telegraph
developed the telephone, electric light, and the phonograph, this marvellous
change is due entirely to the discovery and possibility of photographing direct
from the original upon the boxwood itself, producing with an instant's exposure
a complete reproduction of the original drawing, with all its texture,
gradation, and quality, not only doing away entirely with the intermediate draftsman, as was
the case with "Porte Crayon's" work, but obtaining a result impossible to the
most skilful of the artists on wood of his day. cheap oil paintings for sale
Another important feature in the discovery was the possibility of reducing a
drawing to any size required, thus fitting it exactly to the necessities of the
printed page. Before these discoveries, as you well know, from the time of
Albert Dürer down to Linton and engravers of his school, the original drawing of
the painter was redrawn by the use of lead-pencil, Chinese white, and India-ink
washes upon the wood itself, giving as close an imitation as possible of the
original. Some painters—illustrators, if you please, in those early days—in
fact, made their original designs direct upon the wood. The effects of light and
dark were then cut out in lines, curved or otherwise, with suitable
cross-hatchings, as the necessity of the drawing required, or left comparatively
untouched. original oil paintings wholesale
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