Biography of arthur honegger picture
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* 10. 03. 1892, † 27. 11. 1955.
Arthur Honegger was born 10 March, 1892 in Le Havre (France) and died on 27 November, 1955 in Paris. He was born the son of the tradesman Arthur Honegger (1851-1922) and his wife Julie Ulrich (1859-1922), both from the canton of Zurich. Honegger grew up in France after his parents emigrated to a Swiss colony in Le Havre where his father became a successful importer of coffee. The family returned, however, to their native Switzerland in 1913. Honegger was an official citizen of Switzerland and of the canton of Zurich where he became resident in 1919. He received violin lessons from professor Santreuil and was instructed in harmony by the organist Robert-Charles Martin early on. His first ambitious works remain chiefly unfinished, examples include the operas 'Philippa' and 'Sigismond', sonatas and the 'Oratorio du Calvaire'.
Honegger not only spent each summer in Zurich but also lived there between the months of September 1909 and June 1911. He attended Zurich conservatory during this time and received instruction from Willem de Boer (1885-1962) on the violin, Lothar Kempter (1844-1918) in music theory and Friedrich Hegar (1841-1927) in composition. The first work to be presented for publication through the Desforges Publishers in Le Havre was
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RC satin paper 250 grams
The photosensitive emulsion is coated on a polyethylene support called RC (Resin Coated) which makes this paper particularly resistant to handling and stable over time.
The print is made from the digital file on real silver photo paper. The Durst Lambda imager uses paper with silver emulsion. The transfer is made directly from the digital file, by exposing the photosensitive support with red, green, and blue laser beams. The paper is then developed in a chemical process, washed and dried. This technology guarantees very high-quality productions and a traditional photographic rendering.
The RC satin paper 230 grams is only available for the format 24 X 30 cm.
Hahnemühle baryta paper 315 grams
The baryta silver paper is a paper on a thick cardboard support, covered with a sensitive emulsion and a layer of barium sulfate (or baryte). It is this mineral which allows the whiteness of the paper and its exceptional durability.
Today, paper manufacturers have adapted baryta paper into a modern digital version for inkjet printing. We have chosen the baryta of the legendary brand Hahnemühle.
Permanence. The permanence of a process is its capacity to resist the progressive erasure of dyes or pigments on a given support, under determined expos