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Image | 1807-Paris-Impremerie-04-002 |
Illustration No. | 1   |
Illustrator | Charles Dusaulchoy |
Engraver | Claude-Marie-François Dien |
Lithographer | |
Title Caption | Tout le cortége, enfin, se mit en marche dans l'ordre que voici. En tête le bouvier, qui & c. |
Title Supplied | |
Part | Part I, Madrid 1605 |
Chapter | Chapter 47 |
Subject |
47.1 Departure from inn |
Illustration Type |
Chapter illustration |
Technique |
Burin engraving Stipple / Crayon manner |
Color | Black and white |
Volume | IV |
Page Number | f.p. 251 |
Image Dimension | 70 x 110 |
Page Dimension | 165 x 96 |
Commentary | Well-known scene; don Quixote, sad and "enchanted", is carried into a cage on an oxcart; two officers of justice escort him and Sancho accompanies him; also the barber and the priest disguised.
Drawing and engraving are bad and clumsy; badly-drawn and badly-detailed figures. |
Notes | Claude-Marie-François Dien (Paris, 1787 – Paris, 1865): Painter and engraver. He was a disciple of Reboul and Audoin. In 1809, he won the first prize in engraving, in 1838 and 1848 a first class medal and, in 1853, he was decorated with the “Légion d’honneur”. Between 1822 and 1861 he exposed engravings and watercolors at the Salon; the most of his engravings are portraits, genre and religious scenes for books (Benezit III, 572). |