Object Details
graphic artist
Ferris, Stephen James
Description
This profile portrait of Spanish painter and graphic artist Mariano Fortuny is one of two in the NMAH collection that Stephen Ferris made in 1875, soon after Fortuny’s untimely death at age thirty-six in Rome, Italy, on November 21, 1874.
Gerome Ferris, in a note on the mount, refers to the print as an etching on glass. According to a contemporary, Stephen Ferris “was one of the first artists to practice etching on glass as it was miscalled at the time.” The cliché-verre process, as it known today, originated in France in the nineteenth century. The artist coats a glass plate with an opaque substance and then draws an image on it with a pointed instrument such as an etching needle. He then lays the plate image-side down on a sheet of photosensitized paper and exposes it to light.
This print and a second portrait of Fortuny by Ferris were the only two American etched portraits shown in the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition. The revival of interest in etching that began in Europe during the 1860s did not really take off in the United States until about 1880, but visitors to the exhibition saw a modest number of American etchings at the beginning of the movement.
Location
Currently not on view
Credit Line
Jean Leon Gerome Ferris
date made
1873
1875
ID Number
GA.14552
catalog number
14552
accession number
94830
Object Name
print
Object Type
Cliche-verre
Physical Description
paper (overall material)
ink (overall material)
Measurements
image: 17 cm x 12.5 cm; 6 11/16 in x 4 15/16 in
sheet: 21.5 cm x 14 cm; 8 7/16 in x 5 1/2 in
Place Made
United States: Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
See more items in
Work and Industry: Graphic Arts
Ferris Collection
Communications
Art
Data Source
National Museum of American History
Subject
Portraits
Link to Original Record
Record ID
nmah_1002051