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Into the Woods Set of 4 Magnets

SKU:
X10826
Set of 4 magnets measuring 2 x 3 inches each
$20.00

This set of 4 magnets, each featuring a different landscape by the artist George Sand, make a lovely gift for artists and naturalists alike. Set comes in a plastic storage case with an accompanying information card.

George Sand—the masculine pen name adopted by the French woman Amantine Lucile Aurore Dupin de Francueil (1804–1876)—was one of the most renowned European authors of the mid-nineteenth century. Her novels addressed issues of social class and the plight of the laborer, often couched within stories of love and marriage. She placed many of her characters in rural settings like her native Berry in central France. Off the page, Sand championed women’s rights and advocated for the working class, the poor, and a French republic. Highly independent, she dressed in men’s clothing (without filing for the required permit) in order to get around Paris more easily, smoked cigars, and enjoyed several romantic relationships, including one with the composer Frédéric Chopin. Her network encompassed writers, musicians, and artists, such as Théodore Rousseau.

Sand experimented with watercolor in the 1870s. She dripped pigment onto thick paper and pressed the surface with another sheet, which she had dampened. She then pulled the papers apart, creating a texture reminiscent of dense foliage, and transformed these haphazard spots into imagined scenes of forests, mountains, and lakes. Sand referred to the results as “crushed” or “dendritic drawings”— evoking the effect of the finished works using the Greek word for “tree.” She sometimes pasted colorful vegetal matter within her compositions. The scale and texture of these organic elements add an almost surreal note of play to the scenes, reminding us that they are creative experiments rather than studied landscapes.

This magnet set is a product made to complement the exhibition Into the Woods: French Drawings and Photographs from the Karen B. Cohen Gift on view at the Morgan Library & Museum June 16 through October 23, 2023.