After Chardin
Print
2000 (printed)
2000 (printed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This is one of a group of 143 state, trial and cancellation proofs of etchings by Lucian Freud (1922-2011) which came from the collection of Marc Balakjian (1938-2017) of Studio Prints. Balakjian was Freud’s printer from 1985 and worked closely with him on the production of his etchings.
This print is based on Freud's copy of The Young Schoolmistress, c.1737, by Jean-Simeon Chardin (1699-1779). The painting is in the National Gallery, London, and Freud included it in his selection for 'The Artist's Eye: Lucian Freud' at the National Gallery in 1987, and chose it again when invited to make a painting in response to any work in the gallery's collection for the exhibition 'Encounters: New Art from Old' which opened in 2000. In his two paintings he made numerous changes to the composition, cropping much of the area around the figures and eliminating varous details. He then made two etchings - this, and 'After Chardin (small plate)' - where he cropped the picture even more. This print is about the same size as Chardin's painting. When proofing, Balakjian experimented with various ways of narrowing the contrasts in the plate. The most successful used a even, transparent dark tone, which Freud chose for the edition.
This print is based on Freud's copy of The Young Schoolmistress, c.1737, by Jean-Simeon Chardin (1699-1779). The painting is in the National Gallery, London, and Freud included it in his selection for 'The Artist's Eye: Lucian Freud' at the National Gallery in 1987, and chose it again when invited to make a painting in response to any work in the gallery's collection for the exhibition 'Encounters: New Art from Old' which opened in 2000. In his two paintings he made numerous changes to the composition, cropping much of the area around the figures and eliminating varous details. He then made two etchings - this, and 'After Chardin (small plate)' - where he cropped the picture even more. This print is about the same size as Chardin's painting. When proofing, Balakjian experimented with various ways of narrowing the contrasts in the plate. The most successful used a even, transparent dark tone, which Freud chose for the edition.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | After Chardin (assigned by artist) |
Materials and techniques | Etching on paper |
Brief description | Lucian Freud: Trial proof of After Chardin, 2000. Etching. Printed by Marc Balakjian. |
Physical description | A young woman and a boy, in 18th century dress, at a table looking at a sheet of paper (a copy after Chardin’s painting The Young Schoolmistress). |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions | 22B Trial proof. very dark print, warm black (in pencil; by Marc Balakjian) |
Credit line | Accepted in lieu of inheritance tax by HM Government in 2019 from the collection of Marc Balakjian and allocated to the V&A |
Summary | This is one of a group of 143 state, trial and cancellation proofs of etchings by Lucian Freud (1922-2011) which came from the collection of Marc Balakjian (1938-2017) of Studio Prints. Balakjian was Freud’s printer from 1985 and worked closely with him on the production of his etchings. This print is based on Freud's copy of The Young Schoolmistress, c.1737, by Jean-Simeon Chardin (1699-1779). The painting is in the National Gallery, London, and Freud included it in his selection for 'The Artist's Eye: Lucian Freud' at the National Gallery in 1987, and chose it again when invited to make a painting in response to any work in the gallery's collection for the exhibition 'Encounters: New Art from Old' which opened in 2000. In his two paintings he made numerous changes to the composition, cropping much of the area around the figures and eliminating varous details. He then made two etchings - this, and 'After Chardin (small plate)' - where he cropped the picture even more. This print is about the same size as Chardin's painting. When proofing, Balakjian experimented with various ways of narrowing the contrasts in the plate. The most successful used a even, transparent dark tone, which Freud chose for the edition. |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.419-2020 |
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Record created | February 17, 2020 |
Record URL |
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