Chantez Matines, le jour renait (Sing Matins, day is reborn)
- Aquatint, etching, drypoint and roulette over heliogravure
- 19.875 x 14.25 in
- Georges Rouault
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Not For Sale
Wofsey 136. Plate 29 of 58 from Miserere, published by Vollard and Editions de l'Etoile Filante, Paris.
Vollard originally commissioned "Miserere et Guerre" to be about 100 images, but then backed off. Rouault worked the plates between 1916 and 1927. He recovered the plates from Vollard in 1947 and published "Miserere" with 58 plates and without Andre Suares' text. They were issued loose, in a cloth case. Many plates were worked as many as 15 times.
Georges Rouault was born in Paris on May 27, 1871 and is arguably one of the earliest and most innovative Expressionists. Rouault's artistic background began with an apprenticeship as a glass painter and restorer, and in his work we see the quality of the luminescence he had become familiar with, in the bold lines and painterly glow of the tonal areas. From 1891 - 1898 he studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts under Elie Delauney and Gustave Moreau. With encouragement from Moreau he entered his work in competitions, winning various smaller prizes for his art and soon sending pieces to be shown at the Salon de Artistes Francais. But it wasn't until the beginning of the 20th century that he began to define his own style of expression. Unfortunately, both World Wars and an uncertain political climate delayed the publishing of his prints from one cycle to another; therefore, his notoriety came slowly, and he struggled financially for most of his career. Despite this, his inspiration, drawn from his deep spiritual background and his quiet observation of the world at war with itself, kept him working almost constantly. Near the end of his life, despite an onslaught of admiration by the public and honors given by the French state, Rouault inexplicably burned nearly 300 of his works. He died on February 13, 1958 in Paris, at the age of 87.
- Edition: 450
- Subject Matter: Landscape
- Created: 1922