Artwork Page for The Pranksters (Les Espiègles)

Details / Information for The Pranksters (Les Espiègles)

The Pranksters (Les Espiègles)

c. 1798
(French, 1753–1820)
(French, 1752–1825)
Measurements
Sheet: 57 x 45 cm (22 7/16 x 17 11/16 in.); to borderline: 46.4 x 37.4 cm (18 1/4 x 14 3/4 in.)
Catalogue raisonné
Portalis & Béraldi 3; Model/Springer p. 50, plate 20.
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

This meticulously crafted color print reproduces an oil painting by Jean-Frédéric Schall, an artist best known for his pastoral and mildly erotic scenes.During the French Revolution (1789–99), the market for deluxe color prints declined, as titillating subjects and signs of luxury were considered immoral. When attitudes relaxed around 1800, printmakers like Descourtis made a few color prints using multiple plates to layer tinted inks as they had before the Revolution. However, this time-consuming and expensive process was soon replaced by hand coloring that workers could more cheaply and easily accomplish.
A vertically oriented wash manner etching and engraving depicts a landscape. In the foreground, two nude women with light skin tones sit by a stream, reading a paper. Above them on a jagged brown cliff, two young men with light skin tones lean down; one lowers a blue shoe on a line toward a pile of pink and blue clothing. A white waterfall flows beneath dense, green trees. The title "Les Espiègles" is printed below.

The Pranksters (Les Espiègles)

c. 1798

Charles-Melchior Descourtis, Frédéric Schall

(French, 1753–1820), (French, 1752–1825)
France, 18th century

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