Description: Artist: HENRY WOLF (American, 1852 - 1916)Title: "History Painting" after unidentified artist (American, 1865 – 1929) - 1912Medium: Original wood engraving on fine tissue paperSignature: Hand-Signed by the Artist in Pencil (also signed in the block). Edition: Limited Edition Proof; edition not noted Size: The image sizes may vary, as well as the size of the fine tissue paper; laid down to a sheet @ 12 x 9 1/2 inchesPaper: Fine tissue, corners laid down on period paper, as shown Printer / Publisher: The ArtistReference: Panama Pacific International Exhibition 331; with their notations on lower marginsProvenance: Hatay Stratton Fine Art, Northampton, MassachusettesAbout the Artist: Henry Wolf, born in Eckwersheim, Alsace, France in 1852, was the premier wood engraver working in America from the late 1800's through his death in 1916. He studied with J. Levy in Strasbourg, and came to New York in 1871, after exhibiting throughout Europe, Paris in particular. Wolf primarily transformed art masterpieces into woodengraving for publication in the three most popular literary magazines of the time, Century Magazine, Harper's Monthly and Scribner's Magazine. The American artists he presented for public consumption included John Singer Sargent, Gilbert Stuart and Frank Weston Benson, the Europeans included Jan Vermeer, Edouard Manet and Jean Leon Gerome. Henry Wolf won the Grand Prize for printmaking at the 1915 Panama Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco. One of the last of the great reproductive wood engravers, he exhibited 144 wood engravings. In the book "The Life & Work of Henry Wolf" by Ralph Clifton Smith, there is a quote from a letter received by Mr. Wolf in 1905 from W. Lewis Fraser, for many years connected with the art department of the Century Magazine, referring to Gerome, "'Many thanks for your letter. Gerome's expression as he looked at the proofs of your engravings of his paintings was " 'they are beautiful, Mr. Wolf knew better than my brushes what I wanted to do.' " He began publishing original works of his own design, beginning in 1896 with Evening Star. He worked until his unexpected death in 1916, at the age of 64. One of the last great "New School" of American wood engravers, Henry Wolf won the only Grand Prize in printmaking at the 1915 Panama Pacific Exposition in San Francisco, where he exhibited 144 woodengravings. Wolf died in New York in 1916.
Price: 275 USD
Location: Indio, California
End Time: 2025-02-03T05:21:58.000Z
Shipping Cost: 22.95 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Size: Small (up to 12in.)
Artist: HENRY WOLF (American, 1852 - 1916)
Production Technique: Original Wood Engraving
Style: American Realism / Lyricism, Realism
Material: Etching / Wood Engraving
Theme: History
Time Period Produced: 1900-1924
Type: Original Print - Wood Engraving
Features: Hand-Signed in Pencil by the Artist, Signed, Limited Edition
Subject: Landscape
Signed: Yes
Original/Licensed Reprint: Original
Year of Production: 1912
Unit of Sale: Single-Piece Work
Width (Inches): @10
Listed By: Dealer or Reseller
Height (Inches): @12
Print Surface: Fine Tissue paper, corners laid down
Date of Creation: 1800-1899
Color: Multi-Color