Skip to product information
1 of 8

Harnisch and Company

1932 Hawaii Etching Aquatint Print Makapu'u by Huc M. Luquiens (1883-1961)(***)

1932 Hawaii Etching Aquatint Print Makapu'u by Huc M. Luquiens (1883-1961)(***)

Regular price $1,589.00 USD
Regular price $0.00 USD Sale price $1,589.00 USD
Sale Sold out

Up for sale from a recent client in Honolulu Hawaii, this 1932 Hawaii black and white etching aquatint print and appears untitled but depicts Makapuú on Oahus east end and was created and is signed in pencil by the "god-father" of Hawaii print making Huc M. Luquiens (1883-1961). The condition is described above for more information please check the photos. Free local pick up possible!!! The print can be taken out of the frame and shipped at a fraction of the stated costs.

Measurements:

Image 7 ¾ inches x 11 ⅜ inches

Frame 18 ½ inches x 21 ½ inches

More about the artist:

Best known as a printmaker and teacher who lived in Hawaii during the 1920s and 1930s, Huc-Mazelet Luquiens was also the author, in 1928, of Copper Plate Printing, a pamphlet that was the Honolulu Academy of Arts first publication.


Luquiens was a member of the faculty of the University of Hawaii, where, in the 1925-26 school year, art instruction was offered for the first time. He later was named the head of the art department, and was largely responsible for attracting qualified instructors and interested pupils to the University. Among the instructors who joined him at the University of Hawaii were Ben Norris, in 1936, Henry H. Rempel, Millard Sheets, and Frederik Taubes.


In April 1928, the Honolulu Academy of Art held a retrospective exhibition of the work of Luquiens, who, during the decade he resided in Hawaii, made 330 etchings, dry points, and aquatints as well as lithographs and wood engravings.


He is known for naming the Volcano School of Hawaiian painting the Little Hawaiian Renaissance.


(1881 - 1961) Huc-Mazelet Luquiens grew up in New England and went to school at Yale University. After Yale, he continued his studies in Paris and finally came to Hawaii in 1917.


In New England, Luquiens had focused his etchings on portraiture and architectural subjects. In Hawaii, he found the landscape irresistible and produced numerous studies which have since attained not only artistic but historical importance as well.


In 1924, he became the first art teacher at the University of Hawaii and served as chairman of the art department that he had created until 1946. During his life Luquiens was extremely active in community affairs concerning nature and art. Luquiens co-founded the organization of Honolulu Printmakers which continues today. His work in the community and his outstanding prints have made him a major figure in the art history of Hawaii.

Condition: 

The item is overall in good pre-owned condition, it is Koa wood framed

View full details