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"A Rarely Seen Panorama of Fredericksburg, and the Pictorial" Topic


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©1994-2024 Bill Armintrout
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Tango0109 Apr 2021 10:14 p.m. PST

… Legacy of Henri Lovie

"Among the contemporary drawings of the December 1862 Battle of Fredericksburg, I find a little known panorama by artist-eyewitness Henri Lovie easily the most ambitious. With Battle of Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, 1862, he depicted in a single sketch the fighting at both ends of the battlefield that day–principal combat sites separated by four miles at the extremes. Lovie's drawing measures four and one-half inches in height and nearly five feet in length. Beyond its own artistic power, it served as the main reference for a pair of grand-finale pictures in a striking sequence of eight wood engravings, or woodcuts, of the Fredericksburg campaign. Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper published the eight over the course of five issues and four weeks, basing the other six woodcuts mainly on Lovie's sketches as well and even incorporating the pictures into its editorial critique of the campaign. I only recently noticed his December 13 drawing in the digitized collections of the New York Public Library. The Library's link to it and the means to magnify or download a high-resolution copy are here.

The right end of the sketch includes the only known—to me, at least—eyewitness rendering that looks northwest at the fighting outside Fredericksburg and in front of Marye's Heights. For orientation, I made preliminary, estimated identifications of selected landmarks:…"
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Armand

Captain dEwell10 Apr 2021 6:01 a.m. PST

Looks very interesting. I'm going to put some time aside later to have a good look through it.

Love old maps, photographs and prints.

pmwalt10 Apr 2021 7:21 a.m. PST

Thanks so much for sharing. I live in the area and walk with my dog along the many trails the battlefield offers. I only did a quick look at the article, but intend to review it more thoroughly this evening.

Tango0110 Apr 2021 12:41 p.m. PST

A Votre service mes amis!


Armand

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