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Study of a nude, crica 1900
Unmounted (ref: 5830)
Inscribed with '123' (recto) and 'Drawing by Belleroche' (verso) in the hand of Julie de Belleroche, the artist's wife.
Pencil
12 1/2 x 9 1/2 in. (31.7 x 24 cm)
12 1/2 x 9 1/2 in. (31.7 x 24 cm)
Marx also fully acknowledged Belleroche's importance as painter-lithographer, writing in 1908: Belleroche holds a premier position in the current renaissance of lithography. No one since Eugene Carriere has equaled Belleroche's technique or his understanding of lithography. He is a master.... Indeed he is a painter-lithographer: he brings his subjects to life in moving light and shadows. His ink creates tones which reach the limits of the joyous and profound... His art, born in a daylight which is its own justification, is created from love." (Roger Marx, Peintres-lithographes Contemporains:Albert Belleroche Gazette des Beaux-Arts I, vol 39, 1908, p. 74).