Deucalion et Pyrrha, from "Le Temple des Muses"
Black and white etching on wire rod paper, representing the Grrek myth of Deucalion and Pyrrha, "repeopling the World by throwing some stones behind them, as the capture reports.
Beautiful plate with fresh impression, from the volume “ Le Temple des Muses ”, published in Amsterdam in 1742 by Zacharias Chatelain. Capture (under the image) and author inscribed: " B. Picart del. 1731 " under the frame engraved, on the lower-left margin. In excellent conditions, except for a usual light yellowing of the margins and some visible stains on the right margin. Overall the engraved image is near perfect conditions.
Le Temple des Muses was an illustrated book of Ovid's more popular fables published in 1742 in French by Zacharias Chatelain. The engravings had captions in four languages: French, English, German, and Dutch.
Bernard Picart (Paris, 1673 – Amsterdam, 1733)
French engraver best known for his book-illustrations, including the Bible and Ovid. His most famous work is Cérémonies et coutumes religieuses de tous les peuples du monde , published from 1723 to 1743.
Black and white etching on wire rod paper, representing the Grrek myth of Deucalion and Pyrrha, "repeopling the World by throwing some stones behind them, as the capture reports.
Beautiful plate with fresh impression, from the volume “ Le Temple des Muses ”, published in Amsterdam in 1742 by Zacharias Chatelain. Capture (under the image) and author inscribed: " B. Picart del. 1731 " under the frame engraved, on the lower-left margin. In excellent conditions, except for a usual light yellowing of the margins and some visible stains on the right margin. Overall the engraved image is near perfect conditions.
Le Temple des Muses was an illustrated book of Ovid's more popular fables and other Greek myths published in 1733 in Dutch ( Tempel der Zanggodinnen ), in 1738 in English, and in 1742 in French by Zacharias Chatelain. The engravings had captions in four languages: French, English, German, and Dutch.
The wonderful sixty plates engraved by Bernard Picart were a sort of fashionable mythological compendium , useful in the eighteenth century, when the fascination with Greek and Roman antiquity followed the systematic excavation of the ruins at Pompeii and Herculaneum in southern Italy; and after 1750 a neoclassical style dominated all artistic fields.
Bernard Picart (Paris, 1673 – Amsterdam, 1733)
French engraver best known for his book-illustrations, including the Bible and Ovid. His most famous work is Cérémonies et coutumes religieuses de tous les peuples du monde , published from 1723 to 1743 and was defined: "an immense effort to record the religious rituals and beliefs of the world in all their diversity as objectively and authentically as possible " by Jonathan I. Israel.
SKU | M-95956 |
---|---|
Artista | Bernard Picart |
Typology | Original Prints |
Technique | Etching |
Editor | Amsterdam, Zacharias Chatelain |
Periodo | 1700-1749 |
Conditions | Good (minor cosmetic wear) |
Dimensioni (cm) | 45.6 x 0.1 x 28.6 |
-
Children200,00 €
-
Composition (Nature Morte aux Verres) (V11)16.500,00 €
-
Sanctus Hieronymus640,00 €
-
The Illustrator650,00 €
-
Still Life250,00 €
-
Study for a Bas-Relief350,00 €
-
Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme150,00 €
-
Tower-Man250,00 €
-
Lovers300,00 €
-
The Circus188,00 €
Validate your login
Accedi
Creare un nuovo account