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Engravers and Etchers / Six Lectures Delivered on the Scammon Foundation at the Art Institute of Chicago, March 1916 cover

Engravers and Etchers / Six Lectures Delivered on the Scammon Foundation at the Art Institute of Chicago, March 1916

Chapter 2: TO THE READER
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About This Book

The author presents six illustrated lectures surveying the development and practice of engraving and etching, tracing early German efforts to Martin Schongauer, the Florentine Italian school, the contributions of Albrecht Dürer and the Master of the Amsterdam Cabinet, the Mantegna-to-Raimondi tradition, masters of portrait engraving, and landscape etching. Each lecture combines technical explanation, stylistic analysis, and discussed examples from notable practitioners, accompanied by numerous illustrations and bibliographies to guide further reading.

TO THE READER

When that most sensitive of American print-lovers, the late Francis Bullard, learned that I was to deliver at Harvard, each year, a course of lectures on the History and Principles of Engraving, he wrote me one of those characteristic letters which endeared him to his friends, concluding his wise counsels with these words: “Nothing original—get it all out of the books.”

In these six lectures I have endeavored to profit by his suggestion. In them there is little original: most of it is out of the books. Books, however, like Nature, are a storehouse from which we draw whatever is best suited to our immediate needs; and if in choosing that which might interest an audience, to the majority of whom engravings and etchings were an unexplored country, I have preferred the obvious to the profound, I trust that the true-blue Print Expert will forgive me. These simple lectures make no pretense of being a History of Engraving, or a manual of How to Appreciate Prints. My sole aim has been to share with my audience the stimulation and pleasure which certain prints by the great engravers and etchers have given me. If I have succeeded, even a little, I shall be happy. I would add that the lectures are printed in substantially the same form as they were delivered. Consequently they must be read in connection with the illustrations which accompany them.

The Bibliographies which follow each chapter have been prepared by Mr. Adam E. M. Paff, Assistant in the Department of Prints at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

FitzRoy Carrington

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
June 26, 1916

ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS