L'Allée Montante

Cat. No. 558/II

L'Allée Montante

State/Variant:
State II of V
Date:
c. 1947

Alternate Title:
Fontainebleau
Themes
Architecture
Techniques
Engraving, Etching
Support:
Smooth, wove paper
Dimensions:
plate: 6 7/8 × 4 7/8" (17.5 × 12.4 cm); sheet: 9 15/16 x 6 7/16" (25 x 16.4 cm)
Signature:
"LB" lower left margin, pencil.
Publisher
unpublished
Printer
The artist at Atelier 17
Edition:
1 known impression of state II
Impression:
Not numbered
Curatorial Remarks:
In the second half of the 1940s, Bourgeois spent time at Atelier 17, the print workshop of Stanley William Hayter. The workshop had transferred operations from Paris to New York during the war years. It is not known precisely which prints she made at the workshop since she also worked at home on a small press. The designation of “the artist at Atelier 17” as printer means that the impression was likely made at the workshop. The designation is based on dates, inscriptions, techniques favored at Atelier 17, and/or stylistic similarities to images in the illustrated book “He Disappeared into Complete Silence,” which the artist repeatedly cited as having been made at Atelier 17. It is also possible that Bourgeois worked on certain plates both at home and at the workshop, or pulled impressions at both places.

Given the inscription on the verso of state IV, it appears that Bourgeois considered this composition for "He Disappeared Into Complete Silents," but did not finally include it.
Former Cat. No.:
W & S 46
Descriptive Title:
English translation: "The Uphill Path"
Description:
Soft ground etching and engraving, with pencil and black ink additions
State Changes and Additions:
Changes from state I, in engraving: crescent added in upper left; oval form added in upper center; overall upper composition reinforced and further delineated.
Additions in black ink: right side of large crescent extended and shading added to each end, anticipating state III.
Artist’s Remarks:
"This is forbidding because of the guards... there is no trespassing." Bourgeois remembered, as a child, that a neighbor's house had two forbidding statues at the entrance. "It has to do with a moral, puritanical attitude."

Bourgeois very much liked the perspective of this composition, which, depending on the reading of the central vertical form, can be seen as depicting a house on a tall pole or a house at the end of a long path. "It is as if you bring the past up to the immediacy of the present... or, you can push it back." (Quotes cited in Wye, Deborah and Carol Smith. "The Prints of Louise Bourgeois." New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1994, p. 109.)
MoMA Credit Line:
Gift of the artist
MoMA Accession Number:
161.1990.3
© The Easton Foundation/VAGA at ARS, NY

L'Allée Montante

c. 1947

Source

1947

Fontainebleau

Source

1947

Untitled
Studies
Untitled (Study for L'Allée Montante)
States
L'Allée Montante
L'Allée Montante
L'Allée Montante
L'Allée Montante
L'Allée Montante

Related Works in the Catalogue

Ascension Lente
Hinged Landscape at a Distance
Papiers Dans le Vent
Hinged Landscape—Short Distance
Plate 6 of 9, from the illustrated book, He Disappeared into Complete Silence, first edition (Example 1)

Related Works in Other Mediums

Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled