Artists and Other Frenchmen:

portrait prints from Nanteuil to Villon

Pocket Utopia’s reopening show, a one-evening exhibition of Donald Steele’s photographs under the title The Queen and I, is followed by the gallery’s first exhibition proper, one that might also have been called The King and Others. Spanning more than three centuries of French printmaking, it assembles portraits of subjects as diverse as François I, the French king and patron of Leonardo da Vinci, and Louis XIV, the “Sun King,” as a shy six-year-old boy, to a whole parade of painters, sculptors, and engravers of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Once celebrated, some of them working in the service of the French court, all but a few of these characters have since been forgotten. But not, of course, Charles Baudelaire, the poet of la vie moderne, seen here in two etchings by Marcel Duchamp’s brother Jacques Villon from around 1918.
These impressions were treasured by print collectors over the centuries but have since fallen out of fashion to much the same degree as their subjects. Perhaps a review is in order. These images do not merely represent absolute rulers, or the vain posing of artists who played to the taste of their times. Instead we might see these prints as the results of a series of brilliant technical accomplishments that allowed them to ascend from the realm of craft to that of art. Louis Metcalfe wrote in 1912, for example, of Robert Nanteuil’s works: “Nothing more admirable has been done in the realm of engraving than these quiet prints in which there is no affectation […] and it is a question whether anything more sincere has been accomplished in the history of portraiture.”
We understand this show as something of an excavation, an archeological exercise as much as any art history is. As a laboratory open to experimentation, Pocket Utopia invites viewers to rediscover these exceptional and curious old prints.

Pocket Utopia is located at 191 Henry Street, between Clinton and Jefferson Streets, NYC, Hours are Wednesday - Sunday from 11am - 6pm.

For further information or visuals please call Austin Thomas at 917-400-3869 or C.G. Boerner 212-772-7330

C.G. Boerner

Artists and Other Frenchmen

portrait prints from Nanteuil to Villon
April 29 - May 25, 2012
Opens April 29 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM

Installation Views

portrait prints from Nanteuil to Villon

portrait prints from Nanteuil to Villon

SIMON-CHARLES MIGER
Portrait of the Painter Joseph Marie Vien 1790

SIMON-CHARLES MIGER Portrait of the Painter Joseph Marie Vien 1790

JEAN AUDRAN 
1667 Lyon – Paris 1756
 
Portrait of the Painter Noël Coypel   1708

JEAN AUDRAN 1667 Lyon – Paris 1756 Portrait of the Painter Noël Coypel 1708

JEAN-JOSEPH BALECHOU 
Portrait of the Painter Charles Coypel 1749

JEAN-JOSEPH BALECHOU Portrait of the Painter Charles Coypel 1749

LAURENT CARS
1699 Lyon – Paris 1771
Portrait of the Sculptor Michel Anguier   1733

LAURENT CARS 1699 Lyon – Paris 1771 Portrait of the Sculptor Michel Anguier 1733

ANTOINE MASSON
1636 Loury – Paris 1700 
Portrait of the Guillaume de Brisacier    1664 $1,200

ANTOINE MASSON 1636 Loury – Paris 1700 Portrait of the Guillaume de Brisacier 1664 $1,200

Claude Mellan “Portrait of the Painter Virginia Vouet, née da Vezzo” 1626 Engraving (4 5/8 inches x 3 1/8 inches)

Claude Mellan “Portrait of the Painter Virginia Vouet, née da Vezzo” 1626 Engraving (4 5/8 inches x 3 1/8 inches)

Michel Lasne ca. 1590 Caen – Paris 1667 “Portrait of the King Louis XIV” ca. 1644 Engraving 325 mmx 224 mm (12 7/8 inches x 8 7/8 inches)

Michel Lasne ca. 1590 Caen – Paris 1667 “Portrait of the King Louis XIV” ca. 1644 Engraving 325 mmx 224 mm (12 7/8 inches x 8 7/8 inches)


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