Apr 28, 2022 - Sale 2602

Sale 2602 - Lot 226

Price Realized: $ 10,000
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 10,000 - $ 15,000
RODOLPHE BRESDIN
Le Bon Samaritain.

Lithograph on two Chine appliqués, 1861. 564x444 mm; 22 1/4x17 1/2 inches, full margins. Préaud's first state B (of 2), with the "white bird" lower left and before the transfer to another stone in 1868. Edition of approximately 200 lifetime impressions. Printed by Lemercier, Paris. Signed and dedicated by the artist's daughter, Rodolphine Bresdin, in pencil, lower right. A superb, richly-inked impression of this important lithograph with very strong contrasts and all the details distinct.

Lifetime impressions, such as the current work, are exceedingly scarce. There is also a more common, posthumous edition of approximately 800 impressions (printed after the transfer of the subject to another stone).

Despite his technically complex and highly imaginative printed work, the self-taught Bresdin (1822-1885) remained in obscurity and penniless throughout most of his career. Disregarded by many of his contemporaries due to his eccentricity, he was referred to as "le chien-caillou" ("the stone dog"). Some critics and artists, however, recognized and respected his genius, including Victor Hugo and Charles Baudelaire (Bresdin was also Odilon Redon's mentor).

One of the most visionary printmakers since Rembrandt, he was clearly a devotee of the master's work, evidenced both in his early engravings and lithographs of intimate interior genre scenes and by a comparison of the current work. Like Rembrandt's The Angel Appearing to the Shepherds, etching, 1634, Bresdin's tour-de-force lithograph shows a dark landscape rendered by a complex system of densely overlapped lines and varied tonalities. Van Gelder 100; Préaud 29.