1. For Félix Régamey, Prison life in Blackwell’s Island, New York – Outdoor work [1248], see letter 302, n. 10.
[1248]
2. For Félix Régamey’s Prison life on Blackwell’s Island – no. 1. Returning from work [1251] and for his Blackwell’s Island penitentiary, New York – Dining-room [1247], see letter 302, n. 10.
[1251] [1247]
3. Arthur Hopkins, The boat race and the weather: ‘Oh dear, what a disappointment’, engraved by Joseph Swain, in The Illustrated London News 60 (30 March 1872), p. 313. There is one copy in the estate. Ill. 954 [954] (t*98).
[954]
a. Read: ‘een merkwaardige daglicht-toon’ (a typical tone of daylight).
4. George Louis Palmella Busson du Maurier, The first warm day, engraved by William James Palmer, in The Illustrated London News 60 (20 April 1872), p. 389. There is one copy in the estate. Ill. 1128 [1128] (t*277). Du Maurier’s monogram is reversed and upside down on the engraving, which no doubt explains why Van Gogh asks who the maker might be.
[1128]
5. Jules Descartes Ferat, Les prisons d’autrefois (The prisons of the past) and Les prisons aujourd’hui (The prisons today) both divided into smaller prints, in L’Illustration 39 (4 February 1882), respectively p. 72 and p. 73. Ill. 832 [832] and Ill. 833 [833].
[832] [833]
6. For Renouard’s series The prisons of Paris [397] (Mazas), see letter 261, n. 8.
[397]
7. Ferdinand Heilbuth, Au bord de l’eau (By the water’s edge), in Le Monde Illustré 26 (27 May 1882), p. 321. Ill. 927 [927]. There was also an engraving in L’Illustration 79 (4 February 1882), pp. 76-77. When the painting was shown at the Salon in 1870, the Album Boetzel. Le Salon 1870 included a reproduction.
[927]
8. For Henry Towneley Green,“Restoring the sign” [906], see letter 232, 10. The work that Van Gogh compares with this could be Frank Dadd’s Holding the mirror up to nature, engraved by John Greenaway, in The Illustrated London News 77 (25 December 1880), p. 637. This is because of the similar poses of the painter and the scarecrow. Ill. 2066 [2066] (t*554). The composition of the group of people is such that Dadd’s Consulting the priest: a sketch at Claremorris, County Mayo [1977] is also a candidate, see letter 275, n. 53. Both prints are in the estate.
[906] [2066] [1977]
9. Michael FitzGerald, The poor Irish scholar, engraved by Frederick Wentworth, in The Illustrated London News 60 (27 January 1872), p. 93. There is one copy in the estate. Ill. 843 [843] (t*555).
The second engraving is Michael FitzGerald, A pawn-office at Merthyr-Tydvil, in The Illustrated London News 66 (20 February 1875), p. 169. There is one copy in the estate. Ill. 842 [842] (t*154). Attention has been drawn to the parallels with Van Gogh’s The poor and money (F 970 / JH 222 [2398]) – and consequently with the third letter sketch in letter 270. See exhib. cat. London 1992, p. 138, cat. no. 86, and exhib. cat. Nottingham 1974, p. 51, cat. no. 15.
[843] [842] [2398]
10. [Anonymous], The Warwickshire farm labourers’ strike, in The Illustrated London News 60 (13 April 1872), p. 352. The first engraving is entitled Arch’s cottage, Barford; the second A labourer’s home at Whitnash. There is a copy in the estate with both sheets. Ill. 500 [500] (t*72).
[500]
11. Robert Barnes, Good Friday, in The Illustrated London News 60 (30 March 1872), p. 301. Ill. 539 [539].
[539]
12. Perhaps Van Gogh means the Corot [1701] by Achille Isidore Gilbert, which he also had. See letter 30, n. 6.
[1701]
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