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Henri IV, le Casque

Print
2002 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

In 2002 Australian artist Raymond Arnold made a suite of eight etchings in response to a painting he saw in the Louvre of Henri IV of France in full armour. The series was also inspired by a trip to First World War graves in France, where his grandfather and many other young Australian men died in action.

In each print Arnold depicts one of the component parts from a suit of armour against a ground of synthetic lace. The armour is overlaid with a traditional Provencal textile design that goes back centuries but is still found on today’s French market stalls. The sense of both strength and vulnerability evoked by the armour plays against the associations of the lace and the traditional pattern: delicacy but ‘cheapness’, implicit expendability and working-class origins. The images bring together a variety of themes including war, violence, the fragility of the male body, the use of young working-class men as gun fodder in the war, and collective memory.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleHenri IV, le Casque (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Etching and soft-ground etching on paper
Brief description
Raymond Arnold: Soft ground etching: 'Henri IV le Casque' 2002
Physical description
Image of the helmet of a suit of armour set against a patterned ground of a floral lace curtain. The surface pattern of the helmet slightly different but blending with that of the background. Overall colour an ocher-ish yellow ground with black ink for the lines of the patterns
Dimensions
  • Sheet height: 92.4cm
  • Sheet width: 63.2cm
  • Printed surface height: 69.5cm
  • Printed surface width: 63.2cm
Production typeLimited edition
Copy number
6/15
Marks and inscriptions
Signed and dated lower right below plate: Raymond A '02. Inscribed in pencil lower left below plate: Henri IV - Le Casque 6/15 (The A of the signature is circled with a pencilled line)
Credit line
Given by the artist
Subjects depicted
Places depicted
Summary
In 2002 Australian artist Raymond Arnold made a suite of eight etchings in response to a painting he saw in the Louvre of Henri IV of France in full armour. The series was also inspired by a trip to First World War graves in France, where his grandfather and many other young Australian men died in action.

In each print Arnold depicts one of the component parts from a suit of armour against a ground of synthetic lace. The armour is overlaid with a traditional Provencal textile design that goes back centuries but is still found on today’s French market stalls. The sense of both strength and vulnerability evoked by the armour plays against the associations of the lace and the traditional pattern: delicacy but ‘cheapness’, implicit expendability and working-class origins. The images bring together a variety of themes including war, violence, the fragility of the male body, the use of young working-class men as gun fodder in the war, and collective memory.
Associated objects
Collection
Accession number
E.2092-2004

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Record createdJanuary 6, 2006
Record URL
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