This image is in the public domain (free of copyright restrictions), and as such we offer a high-resolution image of it. See our image rights statement.
See more objects with the color lightgrey sienna tan darksalmon grey or see all the colors for this object.
Object Timeline
| 
							 1911  | 
						
							
  | 
					
| 
							 1991  | 
						
							
  | 
					
| 
							 1994  | 
						
							
  | 
					
| 
							 2025  | 
						
							
  | 
					
Drawing, Panel with Grotesque Design and Scenes of the Labors of Hercules, ca. 1800
This is a Drawing. It was architect: Charles Pierre Joseph Normand. It is dated ca. 1800 and we acquired it in 1911. Its medium is pen and black ink, brush and watercolor on off-white paper, lined with white heavy paper and framed by blue color paper colored light brown and black. It is a part of the Drawings, Prints, and Graphic Design department.
					
			This object was 
					
			
				donated by
			
			Advisory Council.
					
									It is credited Purchased for the Museum by the Advisory Council.
						
- Print, Strapwork Grotesque with Mythological Scene, 1566
 - engraving on laid paper.
 - Museum purchase through gift of Mrs. John I. Kane.
 - 1944-83-7-2
 
- Print, Plate 24, from Grotteßco: in diverßche manieren (Various Grotesques)
 - etching on laid paper..
 - Museum purchase through gift of Mrs. John Innes Kane.
 - 1945-59-12
 
Its dimensions are
71.4 x 20.5 cm (28 1/8 x 8 1/16 in.)
It has the following markings
watermark: D C BLAUM and Churchill 194
It is signed
Signed in pen and brown ink at lower left: C. Normand in. et fecit
Cite this object as
Drawing, Panel with Grotesque Design and Scenes of the Labors of Hercules, ca. 1800; Architect: Charles Pierre Joseph Normand (French, 1765 – 1840); France; pen and black ink, brush and watercolor on off-white paper, lined with white heavy paper and framed by blue color paper colored light brown and black; 71.4 x 20.5 cm (28 1/8 x 8 1/16 in.); Purchased for the Museum by the Advisory Council; 1911-28-500
This object was previously on display as a part of the exhibition The Cooper-Hewitt Collections: A Design Resource.