Leaf of Sketches
Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps, 1833–38
About this artwork
In the heart of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Drawings and Prints collection sits *Leaf of Sketches* (1833–38), an etching by French artist Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps. Created during a pivotal era of Romanticism in 19th-century France, this intimate sheet—measuring about 10 by 7 inches on the plate—captures Decamps' masterful draftsmanship through a series of spontaneous studies. Decamps, a trailblazer in blending Orientalist themes with dramatic realism, drew inspiration from his transformative travels to North Africa and the Middle East in the late 1820s, infusing his works with exotic light, texture, and movement. Etching, Decamps' preferred medium here, allowed for the intricate, velvety lines that mimic the freedom of pencil sketches while enabling multiple impressions from a single copper plate. This technique revived in France during the Romantic period, offering artists like Decamps a way to share preparatory ideas intimately, bridging studio experimentation and public appreciation. Housed in The Elisha Whittelsey Collection since 1962, this leaf exemplifies how prints democratized art, inviting viewers to glimpse an artist's creative process amid the shifting tides from Romantic fantasy to emerging Realism. Though the exact subjects remain evocatively ambiguous, the work's loose, gestural quality highlights Decamps' skill in evoking life and emotion—perfect for pondering the artistry behind the masterpiece.