Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Abraham Bosse wrote the first important treatise on the art of etching in 1645. His highly influential publication urged etchers to aspire to the precision of engravers, rather than cultivating the peculiarities of the etched line, like Rembrandt. To achieve a swelling line akin to an engraving, bosse utilized an instrument called an 'échoppe', a beveled etching needle, which he could twist in the ground to create variable widths of etched line, similar to the work of Jacques Callot. In this print, the etcher is working easily on the left, while the engraver is struggling to incise his plate on the right.
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Abraham Bosse|Jean I Leblond — The Painter
Abraham Bosse|Jean I Leblond — The Noble Artist Painting Lou
Abraham Bosse|Jean I Leblond — The Painter
Bartolomeo Fenice (Fénis)|Domenico Gamberti — Francesco I d'
Adriaen van Ostade — The Painter
Sébastien Leclerc I — Louis XIV Visiting the Royal Academy o
Villain|Hippolyte Bellangé|Gihaut Frères — Ah! Young Man! Wh
Francesco Maggiotto|Pellegrino dal Colle|Niccolò Cavalli — T
Richard Earlom — The Exhibition of the Royal Academy of Pain
Johann Andreas Pfeffel the Elder|Jan Josef Horemans the Elde
Walter George Mason|Bartolomé Estebán Murillo|Edward Henry W
Jean Jacques Flipart|Jean Siméon Chardin — The Draughtsman