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DESCRIPTION:
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A fine impression of one of Laboureur's great images; a rarity - only 11 lifetime impressions were printed.
Tiny fleck upper right, paper imperfection, archival mounting.
Jean-Emile Laboureur traveled to Paris in 1895 intending to study law at the Sorbonne, but found himself drawn to the nearby famed Academie Julian, and although he never officially matriculated there, he became immersed in the Parisian art scene. The great wood engraver Auguste Lepere taught him woodcutting, which initiated Laboureur in an involvement in printmaking that would extend through his career. In 1886 he met Toulouse Lautrec, who influenced Laboureur’s emerging aesthetic style, as did the work of Odilon Redon, Bonnard, and perhaps most notably Felix Vallotton, who became a close colleague, and whose woodcut work often bears a close relationship to Laboureur’s. La Lecture Interrompue demonstrates the close relationship between the two artists, and is among those major achievements which created an aesthetic tradition in woodcutting that has been followed - although rarely as effectively as by these originators - by modernist artists for over a century.
La Lecture is one of a large group of fine Laboureur woodcuts, engravings and etchings in our inventory. If you have inquiries about Laboureur prints, or other fine prints, I'd appreciate your contacting me, by phone at 212 662 1234 or through e mail at hschrank@nyc.rr.com.
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