Allegory of etching: a sphinx with the tail of a scorpion scratches an etching plate with her claws. Etching and letterpress by F. Rops, 1875.

  • Rops, Félicien, 1833-1898.
Date:
1875
Reference:
3086022i
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About this work

Description

"Unguibus et morsu" was a Latin phrase equivalent to "red in tooth and claw". But it means literally "with nails and bite", and is appropriate here because "bite" was a term used to describe the effect of acid on an etching plate

Publication/Creation

Bruxelles (rue de l'Industrie) : Félix Callewaert père, éditeur, 1875.

Physical description

1 print : etching (?) ; image 12 x 8.3 cm

Lettering

Unguibus et morsu vives. Société internationale des aqua-fortistes Letterpress on recto is printed in black and red. Letterpress on verso lists the members of the committee of the society. The president is John Savile Lumley-Savile, 2nd Baron Savile (1854-1931) and the director is Rops

References note

Théodore Hippert and Jean Théodore Joseph Linnig, Le peintre-graveur hollandais et belge du XIXme siècle, vol. 3, Brussels 1879, pp. 889-890, no. 115 ("La chimère de l'eau forte")
Catherine Méneux, La magie de l'encre: Félicien Rops et la Société internationale des aquafortistes (1869-1877). Exposition, Namur, Museé Félicien Rops, 7 octobre-3 décembre 2000, [Namur]: Pandora, 2000

Reference

Wellcome Collection 3086022i

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Where to find it

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