"In a Cotswold Ewe-Pen" - signed, and dated 1902
Lithograph print by Archibald Standish Hartrick (1864-1950) on cream* quality laid paper, Plate No. 14, for 'The Artist Engraver - a quarterly magazine of original work, Edition No. 4, October 1904'
Published by Macmillan & Co, London
Measures 24 by 28 cms. (image). 42 x 34 cms. (product)
Presented in original grey paper folder, as published 1904
Good condition
*paper creamier in actuality than my rather grey photograph... sorry
*Archibald Hartrick: Born in India but moving to Scotland when aged 2, Hartrick became known as a painter, lithographer, art teacher and illustrator and, during his time in France, was known for his friendships with Paul Gauguin, Toulouse-Lautrec and Vincent Van Gogh, all of whom he painted. His artistic training came from the Slade School in London and both the Academie Julian and the Atelier Cormon in Paris. During his lifetime, he exhibited at the Paris Salon, the Royal Watercolour Society, the Venice Bienniale and the Royal Academy.
He contributed as a war artist in both World Wars, firstly featuring scenes of London and then the work of the Women’s Land Army. He taught at the Camberwell School of Art from 1908 to 1914 and later at the Central School of Art, where he taught lithography until 1929. Titles to which he contributed illustrations included The Graphic, Pall Mall Magazine, The Black and White, The Daily Chronicle, The Ludgate Monthly and Pall Mall Budget.