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Jean Baptiste Corot 
Déjeuner dans la clairière 
1857 (taken) 1020s (print) 
  
Salt print, from cliché verre 
16,5 x 20 cm 
  
Bassenge Photography Auctions 
19th - 21st Century Photography, 3 June 2015, Lot: 4023 
  
 
LL/59734 
  
Melot #C65. The cliché verre process employs glass as a negative for a drawing. The plate is covered with an opaque substance like paint or smoke and then scratched through to the glass much like an etching plate. This plate is then used as a negative and contact printed or enlarged onto a sheet of light-sensitive paper. The process was perfected circa 1853 by the French photographer Eugène Cuvelier (1837 - 1900) and used by painters of the Arras and Barbizon schools, including Cuvelier's friend Corot, Daubigny, Rousseau and Millet between 1853 and 1874. Variants of the process were used in the 20th century by Paul Klee, Man Ray and György Kepes. 
 

 
  
 
  
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