
The
Prelude (The
Guitar Player)
2007-12-31
This etching of a beautiful girl playing
a guitar can possibly be dated 1885-1886. There are a few details to
be noted in the etching. The girl has her right hand little finger placed on
the belly and she is plucking almost over the sound hole of the guitar. She
obviously wants to produce a soft and mellow sound from the instrument. The
thumb of her left hand is protruding above the neck. The guitar shows signs of
being French and from the early or middle period of the 19th century: the
moustaches, the fingerboard in level with the soundboard, the peg head
with its mark in mother-of-pearl (?) in the form of a shield.
Charles Sprague Pearce and Stephen Alonzo
Schoff
The etching was made by the American bank-note and portrait engraver Stephen Alonzo Schoff (1818-1904) after a painting by Charles Sprague Pearce (1851-1914). This oil on canvas painting, which at first had the title The Guitar Player, was exhibited in 1883 at the Paris Salon. It is a full-length portrait of the artist's wife seated in a chair, playing a guitar. She has long black hair and is wearing a red shawl. The original painting is now in the estate of Dr. James E. Anliker, Elkins Park, Pennsylvania , USA. It earlier was in the estate of Lowell, Boston, Massachusetts. There is also a preparatory drawing by Pearce in the collection of the Munson Williams Proctor Institute Museum.
Schoff’s great-great-grandson Jonathan Small has kindly provided additional
information on the etching by Schoff. According to Jonathan Small Schoff's The Prelude
was done in 1885/86 for publication in Sylvester Rosa Koehler's book American
Art, Illustrated by Twenty-Five Plates, Executed by the Best American Etchers
and Wood Engravers, From the Paintings Selected From Public and Private
Collections, published in 1886 by Cassell & Company, NY, London, Paris
and Melbourne. Schoff had four etchings included in American Art and they are
some of his finest pieces. Here is an excerpt from a letter written by Schoff
to Koehler regarding The Prelude:
"I think 'The Prelude' is the best picture I have seen of Mr. Pierce [sic]. I haven’t seen 'The Prayer'. The former would make a fine etching. I wanted to do it when I saw the picture. I don’t like his pictures generally. They are too finished & literal. I like what is suggestive with 'chic' – Sargent’s pictures, for instance & Wm. Chase’s best things..." May 3, 1885
In another letter Schoff asked for $250 total payment
for the etching, but Koehler was only able to pay $200. Even with inflation
taken into consideration, Schoff was paid very little for this work. He often
commanded $1000 or more for his larger plates, but the etchings he did for Mr.
Koehler were quite labors of love. In June of 1886 Schoff sent a note to
Koehler regarding how he should go about signing a few proofs of The Prelude.
These must be the prints now offered for sale by Rona Schneider.
Variants of the Prelude etching
There are two copies of the etching in my collection.
The first one is signed
in pencil by Stephen Alonzo Schoff and printed on
Japan paper. This is a brilliant impression suggesting a very early stage and
is possibly one of the proofs mentioned above. The other etching has the text under the picture: "C. Sprague
Pearce pinxt S.A. Schoff
sculpt". This text is lacking on the first etching. This etching probably
comes from a copy of American Art. The title of the etching is "The
Prelude". According to Virtual American
Biographies, "Prelude," also was etched by Los Rios (1883). The
etching was published in Magazine of Art, probably in Washington by the
American Federation of Arts. Schoff studied in Paris from 1839 to 1841 and worked primarily in New England
and New York. Schoff made etchings after paintings by
his American contemporaries such as William Morris Hunt. His collection of
prints, now in the Smithsonian Institution, comprises more than 600 European
and American prints, for example Turner landscapes and Van Dyck
portraits along with his own work.
I'm grateful to
This etching has also been used as a cover to Brigitte
Zaczek's CD-record Romantische
Gitarre and as cover picture to the catalogue of
If you have further information on this engraving
please send an e-mail to
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