Greek Lovers
Asher Brown Durand, 1825
About this artwork
**Greek Lovers**, a delicate engraving by Asher B. Durand from 1825, captures a tender moment between a couple amid a serene waterside scene, complete with a boat and a loyal dog. Measuring just 3 11/16 x 2 3/4 inches, this intimate print exemplifies the precision of early 19th-century American printmaking. Durand, then a promising 29-year-old engraver in New York, created it during his formative years before gaining fame as a founder of the Hudson River School His early career focused on reproductive engravings, translating paintings into affordable prints for a growing middle-class audience. Engraving, an intaglio technique where lines are incised into a metal plate and inked under pressure, allowed Durand to achieve fine details and tonal depth on a tiny scale—ideal for book illustrations or personal collections. This work reflects the Romantic era's fascination with idealized love and nature, evoking classical "Greek" themes of passion and harmony. Likely inspired by European neoclassical motifs, it showcases Durand's meticulous linework, influenced by British masters like William Woollett. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Drawings and Prints department (gift of Mrs. Frederic F. Durand, 1930), *Greek Lovers* offers a glimpse into America's burgeoning graphic arts scene, bridging Old World traditions with New World ambition. A charming snapshot of 1820s sentimentality!