Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Art General

Ink and Light

The Influence of Claude Lorrain's Etchings on England

by (author) Andrew Brink

Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Initial publish date
Sep 2013
Category
General
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780773589322
    Publish Date
    Sep 2013
    List Price
    $70.00

Add it to your shelf

Where to buy it

Description

Claude Lorrain (1600-1682), an eminent seventeenth-century landscape painter, was an equally talented graphic artist. Lorrain's etchings match the mastery and execution of his paintings and yet are largely unrecognized by contemporary collectors and art historians. Andrew Brink, an astute and discriminating art collector, amassed an impressive collection of etchings, engravings, and mezzotints by European master printmakers from the sixteenth century onwards. The keystone works in the Brink Collection, now housed in Guelph, Ontario's Macdonald Stewart Art Centre, are by Claude Lorrain. In Ink and Light, Brink positions Lorrain's prints as seminal to the establishment of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century aesthetics in England, which gave rise to the English pictorialism in art and landscape architecture that would have international influence in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. He discusses the technical and material character of Lorrain's etchings, as well as their connection to literature and philosophy in early modern times. While Brink's main focus is the impact of the etchings, he also looks at paintings and drawings by Lorrain, in addition to works made by other artists after Lorrain. Featuring forty of Claude Lorrain's etchings from the Brink Collection, Ink and Light fills a significant gap in British art history by providing a close reading of Lorrain's prints, their reception in England, and the enduring impact they had on a distinctive British aesthetic.

About the author

Andrew Brink (1932-2011) was professor of English at McMaster University.

Andrew Brink's profile page

Editorial Reviews

“[As] a celebration of Claude’s etchings and a glimpse into the mind of a collector, Ink and Light triumphs.” RACAR