Tsarevich

created by Nicolas McDowall
1997
16pp
290 x 200mm (11.5 x 7.9in)
£40

75 copies signed by Nicolas McDowall

The little Tsarevich Alexei must be one of the saddest characters to have trodden the stage of world history. He was born heir to all the Russias but lived at the wrong time and in a crumbling body. His haemophilia meant constant pain and little fun. A 'home-movie' clip shows a clutch of naked, urchin chums diving happily into a lake. Alexei remains motionless, fully dressed and overseen by his sailor attendants. When the family met its bloody end at Yekaterinburg in July 1918, he was at least, so it is believed, the first to be shot. A famous photograph, the boy looking over his shoulder, haunts. Figurehead, ruler-by-numbers or human being' He was hated by so many but provokes immediate sympathy, love even. Images were distilled from this one photograph and placed on pages and in relation to each other so that they might aid contemplation and meditation on the questions raised by this sad child's short life.

Computer-set Neuland type. Printed on Arches paper on a FAG Control 900 press.
14 images, printed in black, created from a single photograph of Tsarevich Alexei. Printed from relief polymer blocks made by the printer.
Sewn in a single section into an extra sheet of Arches paper and laid in a fold of purple Canson mi-teint paper, printed in black with the title and an extra image.