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CLASSIC

L'ecuyere

L'ecuyere

Regular price $22.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $22.00 USD
Sale Sold out

About our restored prints

Expertly restored: tears and stains are fixed, original clarity and depth of color are thoughtfully revived.

  • Printed on museum-quality fine art paper
  • Archival inks for long-lasting color
  • Professionally color-calibrated
  • Most framed prints ship unassembled for safety. Assembly is simple.

Shipping & Return Policy

Classic Prints/Framed prints: 1-2 weeks
Frames & Decor: 2-3 weeks
Custom Frames: 2-3 weeks
Returns within 2 weeks.

Custom Framed prints are hand assembled and cannot be returned.
See policies in the footer

Classic vs. Premium

Classic Line = Affordable prints and modern frames typically in standard sizes.

Premium Framed Collection = Premium hand-built frames, and unique print sizes.

L’Ecuyère (Hessian Horsewoman) captures the spectacle and poise of the fin-de-siècle circus. A graceful equestrienne circles the ring astride a magnificent horse, her posture confident yet fluid, surrounded by the blurred commotion of clowns and props. The lithograph balances elegance and energy, distilling a fleeting moment of performance into something timeless and composed. The atmosphere is both theatrical and intimate—alive with movement yet suspended in artful stillness.

Why We Picked It
What makes this lithograph remarkable is Ranft’s ability to merge dynamism with refinement. His composition centers on the horse and rider—curving forms set against the soft chaos of the ring—framed by the subtle tonal gradations of color lithography. The light, rendered in delicate pastel hues, gives the print a dreamlike quality while preserving the structure of form and gesture. The result is both technical mastery and poetic observation: a portrait of spectacle that feels deeply human.

Notable Context
This lithograph appeared in L’Estampe Moderne No. 12 (April 1898), part of the celebrated Parisian print series that championed the Art Nouveau movement and the revival of fine color lithography. The publication brought together leading illustrators and printmakers of the era, artists exploring how modern life, fashion, and entertainment could be expressed through bold design and new printing techniques. Ranft’s L’Ecuyère embodies that synthesis: it reflects the late-19th-century fascination with performance culture while demonstrating the technical sophistication that defined the golden age of the lithographic print. The series itself was emblematic of a cultural shift—when illustration, once considered secondary, became a respected form of modern art.

About the Artist
Richard Ranft (1862–1931) was a Swiss painter, draftsman, and engraver whose career bridged the Symbolist and Art Nouveau periods. Trained in Geneva and later in Paris under Gustave Courbet and Augustin-Alexandre Dumont, Ranft mastered both landscape painting and printmaking. He exhibited at the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts and the Société des Artistes Indépendants, and his lithographs were widely published in the influential journals L’Estampe Moderne and L’Estampe Nouvelle. Ranft’s work stands out for its fluid line, compositional grace, and sensitivity to light—qualities that placed him among the foremost interpreters of Belle Époque visual culture.

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