Express Press Release Distribution

Accounting
Advertising
Aerospace
Agriculture
Apparel & Fashion
Automotive
Biotech
Chemicals
Computers
Construction
Consumer Services
Defense
Education
Electronics
Energy
Entertainment
Environment
Financial
Food & Beverage
Government
Healthcare
Human Resources
Industrial
International Trade
Internet & Online
Law
Management
Marketing
Media
Non Profit
Pharmaceuticals
Real Estate
Retail
Semiconductors
Small Business
Software
Sports
Telecommunications
Transportation / Logistics
Travel

EPR Archived News

Archived News 2012
~ April
~ March
~ February
~ January

Archived News 2011
~ December
~ November
~ October
~ September
~ August
~ July
~ June
~ May
~ April
~ March
~ February
~ January

Archived News 2010
Archived News 2009
Archived News 2008
Archived News 2007
Archived News 2006
Archived News 2005
Archived News 2004

 

LiveAuctionTalk com Highlights Silhouette Sales in its Weekly Free Article

Released on = April 16, 2007, 4:52 am

Press Release Author = Rosemary McKittrick

Industry = Internet & Online

Press Release Summary = Rosemary McKittrick's column covers the gamut in art,
antique and collectible sales. Visit her site and sign up for a free weekly
subscription.



Press Release Body = April 16, 2007--Louis XV of France had a minister of finance,
Etienne de Silhouette, who was a renowned cheapskate. His name was linked to just
about everything done on a shoestring.

In his spare time, the minister enjoyed cutting out people's profiles from black
paper. When these inexpensive paper cutout profiles became popular in France, they
were naturally called silhouettes.

The good news is--silhouettes as an art form outgrew their namesake to become
desirable collectibles in their own right.

Through shadow and line silhouettes become art much like the shadow drawings of game
and people on prehistoric cave walls. Before photography, silhouettes were the
snapshots of their time period.

These black-and-white sideways portraits were so common in the United States in the
18th and 19th century professional artists set up silhouette museums. They also
traveled from city to city doing profiles.

Some artists used machines which automatically traced a sitter's profile. A person
sat in a candle-and-chair apparatus which cast a shadow on a piece of parchment
hanging beside them.

The shadow was traced almost exactly. Then the tracing was reduced in size with the
help of a draftsman's tool which made copies of the original.

Much like a photographer today, people who never had time to sit for a painting
found time to sit for a profilist. When photography came along, the popularity of
these shadow pictures naturally declined.

The best silhouette artists show skill and delicacy in their profiles. Much of
their work is charming and naïve, reminiscent of a world long gone. From a
collecting standpoint, machine-made silhouettes usually lack the grace of handmade
silhouettes. They're generally less valuable too.

On Jan. 5 & 6, 2007, Garth's in Delaware, Ohio, featured a selection of silhouettes
in its Early American Antiques & Decorative arts auction.

Read the entire article at www.LiveAuctionTalk.com.

RSS: www.liveauctiontalk.com/rss/lat.rss.


Web Site = http://www.LiveAuctionTalk.com

Contact Details = info@liveauctiontalk.com

  • Printer Friendly Format
  • Back to previous page...
  • Back to home page...
  • Submit your press releases...
  •