Writing and collecting
Burty devoted a considerable amount of effort and money to assembling a unique collection of prints and Japanese objets d’art, of which the printmaker Félix Buhot immortalised several of the highlights in a series of etchings with the title Japonisme.
Burty did not only collect for his own pleasure: he also invited interested parties to study his collection, and he encouraged artists to stimulate their creativity through the decorative visual idiom of Japanese art.
Pioneer
Burty’s progressive ideas made him a pioneer of the efflorescence of fine-art printmaking that occurred in the 1890s. Although he was not around to experience it himself, his pivotal role was taken over enthusiastically by the critic and collector Roger Marx. Where Burty had primarily championed etching, however, Marx focused on all printmaking techniques.
Further reading
- Philippe Burty, ‘La belle épreuve’ in L’eau-forte en 1875, Paris, 1875
- Philippe, Burty, ‘Préface’, Exposition des peintres-graveurs (Galerie Durand-Ruel), Paris, 1889
- Gabriel P. Weisberg, The independent critic, New York 1993