La Rue de l’Apport à Dinan

Caroline Helena Armington Canadian

Not on view

Armington visited Dinan in Brittany in 1932 and created this etching centered on a medieval wooden buildings whose irregularly shaped columns create arcades beside a cobbled street. Born near Toronto, the artist moved to Paris with her artist husband Frank Armington in 1905. They both learned to etch in 1908 and then traveled through Europe and to North Africa and North America to find subjects. Demonstrating an interest in traditional picturesque imagery, Armington's work also demonstrates the influence of James McNeill Whistler and the continued significance in the early twentieth century of principles espoused by the Etching Revival.

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