Lithographic Sketches: It is the End of the World! (frontispiece)

1824
(French, 1792–1845)
published by
Image: 20.1 x 15.7 cm (7 15/16 x 6 3/16 in.)
Catalogue raisonné: Béraldi, vol. IV, p. 124, no. 9
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Location: not on view

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Description

The museum's extensive collection of early lithography documents the development of the technique in Europe. Invented by a German, Alois Senefelder (1771-1834), in 1798 for commercial purposes, lithography was quickly adopted by artists. Lithography did not begin in France until 1816, however, when two workshops were established in Paris. By 1824 so many lithographs were being produced that a deluge of lithographic albums could end the world!
Lithographic Sketches:  It is the End of the World! (frontispiece)

Lithographic Sketches: It is the End of the World! (frontispiece)

1824

Nicolas Toussaint Charlet, Gihaut

(French, 1792–1845), null
France, 19th century

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