Souvenir of a Castle in Vosges

Victor Hugo French

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 690

Beyond his careers as a statesman and a celebrated novelist—writing such classics as "The Hunchback of Notre-Dame" and "Les Misérables"—Hugo was an innovative draftsman, although he kept his drawing practice private. He made many of his drawings, including this one, during his almost twenty-year exile from France on Guernsey, in the Channel Islands, following Napoleon III’s 1851 coup-d’état, which he vocally opposed. On this sheet, Hugo obtained the outline of the castle using a cut-paper stencil, transforming it with his pen and layers of moody wash and atmospheric gouache to evoke a memory from the Vosges Mountains of eastern France.

Souvenir of a Castle in Vosges, Victor Hugo (French, Besançon 1802–1885 Paris), Brush and iron gall washes, pen and iron gall ink, white gouache; outline of castle obtained by using a paper stencil

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