| Reference: | A54029 |
| Author | Gebbie & Husson Company |
| Year: | 1900 ca. |
| Zone: | Naples |
| Measures: | 365 x 235 mm |
| Reference: | A54029 |
| Author | Gebbie & Husson Company |
| Year: | 1900 ca. |
| Zone: | Naples |
| Measures: | 365 x 235 mm |
Panorama of Naples taken from the Villa del Principe di Salerno.
Derived from the painting by Giuseppe Castiglione (1829–1908), painted at the beginning of the century.
Hand-colored photogravure, circa 1910, published in Philadelphia in the first quarter of the 20th century by Gebbie & Husson.
Gebbie & Husson Company, Ltd. was a prominent 19th-century printer and publisher renowned for pioneering the photogravure printing process. Founded by Scottish immigrant George Gebbie in Philadelphia, the company specialized in high-quality intaglio art reproductions and book illustrations throughout the 1880s and 1890s.
Their detailed, sepia-toned prints brought famous European paintings and theatrical photography to the public eye. Today, antique collectors and art historians prize these surviving prints, many of which can be found in major institutional collections.
Gebbie & Husson Company (attiva dal 1880 circa)
|
Gebbie & Husson Company, Ltd. was a prominent 19th-century printer and publisher renowned for pioneering the photogravure printing process. Founded by Scottish immigrant George Gebbie in Philadelphia, the company specialized in high-quality intaglio art reproductions and book illustrations throughout the 1880s and 1890s.
Their detailed, sepia-toned prints brought famous European paintings and theatrical photography to the public eye. Today, antique collectors and art historians prize these surviving prints, many of which can be found in major institutional collections.
|
Gebbie & Husson Company (attiva dal 1880 circa)
|
Gebbie & Husson Company, Ltd. was a prominent 19th-century printer and publisher renowned for pioneering the photogravure printing process. Founded by Scottish immigrant George Gebbie in Philadelphia, the company specialized in high-quality intaglio art reproductions and book illustrations throughout the 1880s and 1890s.
Their detailed, sepia-toned prints brought famous European paintings and theatrical photography to the public eye. Today, antique collectors and art historians prize these surviving prints, many of which can be found in major institutional collections.
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