May 15, 2025 - Sale 2704

Sale 2704 - Lot 134

Unsold
Estimate: $ 1,000 - $ 1,500
Moran, Mary Nimmo (1842-1899)
'Tween the Gloaming and the Mirk.

New York: Klackner, 1883.

Etched print incorporating roulette, mezzotint and sandpaper, printed in sepia ink on cream wove paper, signed and dated 1883 in the plate, with full margins 202 x 295 mm; 8 x 11¾ in.

"The title of Mary Nimmo Moran's etching 'Tween the Gloaming and the Mirk' refers to the ballad 'When the Kye Come Hame; by the Scottish writer James Hogg. First published under this title in 1823, the song was reprinted throughout the late nineteenth century and was popular with Scottish immigrants in the United States such as Nimmo Moran. The time 'tween the gloaming (dusk) and the mirk (dark of night) was the twilight hour when agricultural communities brought the cows (kye) back from grazing in the fields. [...] The print also illustrates Nimmo Moran's successful endeavors as an artist and her mastery of one of her etching tools, the roulette. The roulette is a revolving toothed wheel on a handle, which can be run over an etching plate to produce patterns of small dots that hold ink, which when printed register as tonal shifts. The use of the roulette creates the moody, atmospheric variations in the sky evocative of the descent of night as it overtakes the day. The foregrounding of the road encourages the viewer to follow it back toward the lowering sky, and if one looks closely a solitary figure on horseback ambles up the incline on the way home." (Quoted from Sandra Pauly, Henry Luce Foundation Curatorial Scholar for Moran Collection Research, 2020, Gilcrease Museum.)