The line engravings for Eupalinos are a masterclass in how to handle an engraver's burin. Although the end result may look similar, and both are intaglio processes, engraving and etching are very different. Etching is much more like drawing. With the etching needle, the artist can quickly sketch a subject, and the hard work of incising it into the metal plate is all done by the acid, which bites the line into the metal. Engraving, on the other hand, is an intensely physical activity. The engraver drives the burin away from his body, literally ploughing through the metal to gouge out lines. These lines will all be straight, like those of a plough, unless the engraver manoeuvres the plate around with his other hand.
Ferdinand Springer studied engraving at Atelier 17 under Stanley William Hayter in the 1930s. The sheer physicality of engraving absorbed him. He remembered proudly how Le Corbusier said to him, "You trace the furrows like a peasant with his plough" - though of his generation only Roger Vieillard used a burin with such grace.
340 copies were published of Eupalinos, with the engravings printed by Paul Haasen on vélin pur fil à la forme des papeteries du Marais; there were also 28 suites on Annam and 28 on Malacca.
Springer's prints for the myth of Plato's Cave use a mixed technique, combining line engraving with aquatint. 146 copies were published, with the engravings printed on vélin pur fil du Marais by Raymond Haasen, plus 6 suites on Japon and 26 on Arches.
Painter, sculptor, engraver. Ferdinand Springer was born in Berlin, but moved to Paris at the age of 20, where he studied at the Académie Ranson under Roger Bissière. In his later years, the art of Ferdinand Springer was purely abstract, distinguished by its elegance of line and the way it explores what he called the secret antagonism between the line and color. In his earlier phase, his engravings are influenced by Surrealism.
Ferdinand Springer was interned in the French concentration camp at Tuileries des Milles in 1939 alongside Ernst, Bellmer, and Wols. Freed in 1940 he joined Hans Arp, Sophie Taeuber-Arp, Sonia Delaunay and Albert Magnelli in Grasse where they formed the Grasse Group. Springer succeeded in emigrating to Switzerland in 1942; in 1945 he returned to France. Ferdinand Springer subsquently became a French citizen. His work is in over 40 museums worldwide. He died in Grasse in 1998.