Artwork Page for The Queen of the Fishes: Plate 12

Details / Information for The Queen of the Fishes: Plate 12

The Queen of the Fishes: Plate 12

1894
(British, 1863–1944)
Measurements
Book page: 19.2 x 13.3 cm (7 9/16 x 5 1/4 in.)
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Pissarro, son of the French Impressionist artist Camille Pissarro, moved to England in 1890. By 1894 he and his wife, Esther Bensusan Pissarro, had bought a printing press and established the Eragny Press. Influenced by William Morris, they were involved in every step of the production process: designing, cutting the woodblocks, setting type, and printing. The first book published by Ergany Press, The Queen of the Fishes, is based on an old fairy tale in which a peasant boy and girl escape the hardships of their lives by fantasizing that they have been turned into a giant oak and a splendid fish, respectively.
A vertical woodcut on a book page features figures with light skin tones within a green leafy border. At the center, a woman in a floral dress and flower crown raises her arms. To our left, another woman with long dark hair leans over a pond with lily pads. In the foreground, a girl in a striped blue dress and orange leggings faces away from us, gesturing toward golden fields and a distant cottage.

The Queen of the Fishes: Plate 12

1894

Lucien Pissarro

(British, 1863–1944)
England, 19th century

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