Apr 29, 2014 - Sale 2347

Sale 2347 - Lot 301

Price Realized: $ 15,000
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 8,000 - $ 12,000
MARTIN LEWIS
Fifth Avenue Bridge.

Drypoint on cream laid paper, 1928. 253x303 mm; 9 7/8x12 inches, full margins. Edition of 108. Signed in pencil, lower right. Etruria Italy watermark. A brilliant, richly-inked and luminous impression of this important print.

Australian-born Lewis (1881-1962) was one of the leading contributors to American printmaking in the first half of the twentieth century, creating approximately 150 etchings and lithographs between 1915 and 1953. While many of his contemporaries explored the ever-changing New York cityscape by meticulously capturing new and old architecture alike, Lewis' fascination centered on the cities inhabitants. Lewis approached printmaking as an art form in and of itself (rather than ancillary to painting). His print compositions were unique and he excelled at virtually every printmaking technique, using his remarkable skills to push each one to its greatest potential. Lewis strove for tonal quality above all else in his prints, going so far as to treat plates with sandpaper and other materials before etching them in order to achieve grain (see lot 305). The softness that Lewis captured when he utilized various techniques to bring out a wide spectrum of tones lends a distinctive painterly quality to his prints. Interestingly, he rarely used aquatint and mezzotint, two techniques traditionally utilized for their tonal quality. Lewis also rejected the practice of manipulating ink during the printing process (a method exposed by Whistler) and preferred to put the "work' into the plate itself. McCarron 72.