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'THE BATH' - wood engraving by William Strang, published in 1904

£150.00
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'The Bath':  wood engraving by William Strang RA (1859-1921)* for

'The Artist Engraver - A quarterly magazine of original work - edition number 4 October 1904'.

Published by Macmillan & Co, London.

Measures 22 by 25 cms

Good condition

Unmounted

 

* William Strang RA (1859-1921).  Dumbarton born Strang was known in his lifetime as a portrait painter and printmaker.  He enrolled at the Slade School of Art in London in 1876, and studied under the school’s then newly-appointed professor, the French Realist Alphonse Legros (1837–1911). Legros had introduced a continental style of teaching which focused on the importance of fine draughtsmanship and drawing from life.  Strang’s closely observed depictions of the lives of the urban poor are clearly influenced by Legros as well as by a life-long respect for the traditions of the old masters Rembrandt, Dürer, Van Dyck, and Goya.

Strang was a prolific printmaker and across his lifetime produced over 750 original prints. He worked mostly in etching, but experimented with other techniques including drypoint, mezzotint, lithography, aquatint, woodcut and engraving. He was a key figure in bringing about an international revival of interest in original printmaking during the late-nineteen and early twentieth-century. Although he went on to achieve great recognition as a painter, printmaking remained central to Strang’s work until his death.