
This exhibition is no longer on view at the National Gallery. Please follow the links below for related online resources or visit our current exhibitions schedule.

French
artist
Félix-Hilaire Buhot (1847–1898) created impressionist
prints notable for their inventiveness in reproducing the effects
of weather, such as rain, snow, mist, and fog. The National
Gallery of Art has an outstanding collection of over one hundred
Buhot prints and drawings, many rare, from which this exhibition
is drawn. Some sixty prints and several drawings closely examine
Buhot's experimental techniques through his two most frequent
subjects: the city and the sea. His city prints depict the
grand public squares and streets of Paris and London; his seascapes
render passing tempests and foreboding skies and suggest pervasive
melancholy. Like his contemporaries, Edgar Degas and Camille
Pissarro, Buhot was interested in exploring new ways of rendering
atmospheric effects: in single prints he not only combined
different techniques, such as etching, drypoint, aquatint and
even photomechanical reproduction, but also employed different
types of inks and papers.