Overview
A delicate color etching and aquatint featuring a botanical study of a rose in bloom. This piece showcases the 'in-the-plate' color technique pioneered by the Kasimir family, characterized by soft, atmospheric tones and precise line work.
Preliminary identification
Photo reference
1 uploaded photo
Overview
A delicate color etching and aquatint featuring a botanical study of a rose in bloom. This piece showcases the 'in-the-plate' color technique pioneered by the Kasimir family, characterized by soft, atmospheric tones and precise line work.
Story
The Kasimir family revolutionized printmaking in Vienna, moving away from hand-coloring black-and-white prints. This rose represents a quiet moment of beauty from a studio more famous for grand European cityscapes.
Maker / Origin
Luigi Kasimir (1881–1962) was an Austro-Hungarian artist who became one of the first to develop the multi-color etching process. His work is held in major institutions like the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and his family continued his legacy for generations.
Condition & Value
The print appears well-preserved within its matting, though there is slight yellowing consistent with age. If the paper is touching non-acid-free cardboard, it may develop 'foxing' or brown spots over time. Professional archival framing would preserve its current value.
Full Research
Sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance pulled from recent auction results.
Build on this identification
Layer in sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance.
Comparable demand stays strongest where maker, originality, and venue confidence line up. Broader examples still trade, but the range tightens quickly when provenance, condition, or selling lane fit is missing.
Best Venue
Specialty auction or a focused dealer with buyers already in this lane.
Signed example with light edge wear and original frame.
Comparable format with stronger provenance and cleaner surface.
Smaller related piece with visible craquelure and trimmed margins.
Period match with softer condition and weaker subject matter.
Close market lane comp with similar material and presentation.