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Hibou Centrillard
Meunier, Henri Georges Jean Isidore, born 1873 - died 1922 - Enlarge image
Hibou Centrillard
- Object:
Print
- Place of origin:
Paris, France (published)
- Date:
1845-1851 (published)
- Artist/Maker:
Meunier, Henri Georges Jean Isidore, born 1873 - died 1922 (artist)
Guyard, born 1781 (engraver)
Arthus Bertrand (publisher) - Materials and Techniques:
Hand-coloured engraving
- Credit Line:
Bequeathed by Walter Strachan
- Museum number:
E.272-1994
- Gallery location:
Prints & Drawings Study Room, level E, case I, shelf 6, box E
This hand-coloured image of an owl is taken from the book Voyage en Abyssine . It was engraved by Guyard (born 1781) from illustrations by Henri-Georges Meunier. The book was printed by Chardon aîné et Aze and published by Arthur Bertrand, Paris, between 1845 and 1851. It comes from a collelction of images of owls amassed by poet and scholar Walter Strachan (1903-1994). This is a rare instance of a print in Strachan's collection which had been taken from a published book, rather than being an autograph print or proof.
Strachan was fascinated by the art of the book. His interest was inspired by a visit to an exhibition of artists’ books at the National Gallery in London in May 1945. In due course he wrote many articles on the subject, as well as a major reference work, The Artist and the Book in France (published 1969); he also encouraged successive Keepers of the National Art Library at the V&A “to buy them for England.” To this end he visited France every year, to meet the artists, and acquired proof pages to illustrate his articles and to show to potential purchasers of the books, including the V&A. Over the years he amassed a collection of images of owls; some of these were illustrations from livres d’artistes, and others were designed especially for him as gifts or greetings. The collection of owls began with a visit to the artist Roger Chastel (1897-1981) in 1952, where he witnessed the printing of Le Bestiaire de Paul Eluard. In a subsequent article (“Genesis and Growth of a Collection”, for Connoisseur, 1972) he explained: “My article on Chastel’s Bestiaire had the happy result of bringing me a special print on Auvergne paper of the owl which I had admired in the book. Contacts in the art-world of Paris are close and friendly, and I was marked down as an owl-man, in consequence of which I have gradually been given dedicated owl prints and originals in every medium from pen and ink to enamel…”

