Thursday, December 8, 2016

William Strang I

William Strang
The Grandfather
1893
etching, engraving, drypoint
British Museum

William Strang
The student
1889
etching, drypoint
British Museum

William Strang
Old man reading
1891
etching, drypoint
British Museum

William Strang (1859-1921) learned printmaking in the late 1870s at London's Slade School of Art, where he studied with the French political refugee Alphonse Legros. The populist ideals of Legros determined both his own choice of subjects as an artist and his rigorously realistic style. William Strang absorbed similar values, attending to the lives of working people and the poor with respect and restraint. The prints seen here are mainly from collections at the British Museum and were obtained directly from the artist and his descendants.

William Strang
Woman darning
1884
etching, mezzotint
British Museum

William Strang
The Hedger
1891
etching, mezzotint
British Museum

William Strang
The Quarrymen
1897
etching
British Museum

William Strang
The stone cutters
1894
etching, engraving, drypoint
British Museum

William Strang
Fish stall
1891
etching, drypoint
British Musuem

William Strang
On the Road
1896
etching
British Museum

William Strang
The Umbrella Mender
1885
etching
British Museum

William Strang
The Fortune-teller
1883
etching
Victoria & Albert Museum

William Strang
The Fruit-seller (after Rembrandt)
etching
1883
Victoria & Albert Museum