
This Anguished World of Shadows George Rouault's Miserere et Guerre
Holly Flora and Soo Yun Kang. With a Preface by Ena Heller, Executive Director of the Museum of Biblical Art (MOBIA), New York
Published by GILES in association with the Museum of Biblical Art (MOBIA), New York
Publish Date — April 2006 (UK and USA)
Dimensions — 192 pages, 279 x 229mm (9 x 11 in.), portrait
Illustrations — 58 duotone and 20 b&w illustrations
Hardback price — UK£35.00/US$60.00
ISBN — 1-904832-25-3
ISBN — 978-1-904832-25-6
Book Details (pdf) — World_of_Shadows_ai.pdf
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Sales Points
Presents one of the very few remaining intact series showing all 58 plates from Miserere et Guerre out of the 450 editions originally printed in 1948
About the Book
A dying, shipwrecked man utters his last sentence, declaring that tomorrow will be beautiful. A poor woman struggles down the road carrying a heavy load on her back. A barren suburban street is outlined in shadows. These are among the haunting impressions in Georges Rouault’s Miserere print series, originally titled Miserere et Guerre (“Have mercy,” a quotation from Psalm 51, and “War”). This portfolio was initially commissioned in 1914, but remained unpublished until 1948, by which time Rouault had witnessed the immense destruction of World Wars I and II, and with them, the complete transformation of the European landscape. This Anguished World of Shadows: Georges Rouault’s Miserere et Guerre presents all fifty-eight prints from the series, offering a close look at this artist’s poignant commentary on the hardships of war and the promise of redemption. Rendered with thick black outlines and diffused gray tonalities that evoke the smoke and darkness of a world destroyed, the Miserere prints simultaneously have the luminescence of stained glass, hinting of light breaking through darkness. While sombre, the prints also carry the message of hope for renewal and rebirth, for as Rouault knew well, behind every shadow is a source of light.
Of the 450 editions of the Miserere originally printed, only a limited number remain intact; the series featured in this volume, is a generous loan from a private collector. This new colour catalogue features over seventy images, including all fifty-eight plates from the Miserere. The catalogue features contributions from MOBIA’s curatorial staff, including an essay on Rouault’s printmaking techniques by Dolores DeStefano and a bibliography.
