Pierre Lélu (1741-1810)
“The massacre
of the innocents”, 1793, after Raphael (Italian, 1483–1520)
Etching with
engraving on wove paper, signed and dated in the plate (lower right).
Size: (sheet)
34.9 x 51 cm; (plate) 28.8 x 42.2 cm; (image borderline) 26.9 x 41.8 cm
Condition: crisp
impression in almost pristine condition for its age (i.e. there are no significant
stains, tears, abrasions, holes, losses or foxing) with large margins.
I am selling
this large and important etching after Raphael’s design for the total cost of
AU$316 (currently US$240.31/EUR218.51/GBP197.31 at the time of this listing)
including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this important and sensitively executed etching, please contact
me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal invoice to
make the payment easy.
This print has been sold
Before entering
into a discussion about Lélu’s print executed in 1793, I need to point out that
Raphael did not create a painting titled “The massacre of the innocents.” Instead,
Raphael planned that his design would be executed in collaboration with Marcantonio
Raimondi as an engraving.
I also need to mention that after Raimondi completed his collaboratively
designed engraving, he executed a second version of the print, presumably for
monetary gain. The key difference between the two versions is, as Martin
Clayton (1999) in “Raphael and his Circle: Drawings from the Windsor Castle”
clarifies: “the presence or absence of a fir tree in the right distance” (p.
80).
Mindful that
there are two engraved versions by Ramondi of the terrible biblical infanticide
massacre ordered by Herod the Great of all young males in the vicinity of Bethlehem, what makes
Lélu’s etching interesting is that he has reproduced the first version—Raphael’s
original conception for the print with the fir tree—rather than Ramondi’s
second version without it. Having said this, however, Lélu has employed great
artistic license in his translation of the first version as there are other subtle
differences separating the prints. Going further, Lélu’s print not only exhibits
differences with the first version, his print is different to all the earlier
versions. For example, all of the earlier versions show the tower of the
building on the far left with a pyramidal shaped roof, whereas in Lélu’s print the
tower is roofless and with a crenulated parapet. Moreover, Lélu has removed the
foliage mass of trees shown above the signature tablet on the left edge in both
the earlier versions. In short, Lélu may have made a graphic translation of
Raphael’s design but his print is also is many ways a unique design in itself.
(Note: the
different versions of Marcantonio Raimondi’s engraving may be seen in Walter L
Strauss (gen. ed.) 1978, “The Illustrated Bartsch”, Vol. 26 pp. 29–33.)
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