John Samuel Agar (1773–1858)
“Plate LXVII”,
1808, printed by T Bensley, published by T Payne and J White in 1809 for the
Society of Dilettanti in “Specimens of Antient Sculpture, Aegyptian, Etruscan,
Greek, and Roman”, London. According to Christie’s catalogue for Sale 7725, Lot
151, most of the illustrations in this two-volume book were made from the
collections of Richard Payne Knight and Charles Townley. Christie’s also advise
that there were 133 engraved plates in an edition of 200 copies, of which 60 were
on large-paper reserved for members of the society. This print is from the reserved edition of 60 elephant folio prints.
Stipple
engraving in sepia on thick laid paper, watermarked “J Watman 1809”, with
extremely large margins (as published in the rare limited edition of 60 reserved
for members of the Society of Dilettanti in 1809).
Size: (sheet) 54.5
x 37 cm; (plate) 28 x 22.8 cm
Lettered (lower
left) “J. Agar del et sc.”; (lower centre) “BRASS. / same size / R.P. KNIGHT,
Esq. / Published by T.Payne & I.White London, Jan 1st 1808.”;
(upper left) “Plate LXII.”
Condition: crisp
and strong impression with full margins (as published) in marvellous condition
for its age.
I am selling
this remarkably rare stipple engraving from 1808, published in the very small
edition of only 60 prints, for the total cost of [deleted] including postage
and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this original engraving, 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
For those who
may be unfamiliar with the remarkable achievements of the Society of Dilettanti, I need to go back to its London roots in 1732 when the group had its first
meetings as little more than a dining club with membership restricted to those
who had made the grand tour of Europe. By 1736 the group had begun taking
minutes of its meetings and the Society of Dilettanti was formed with the
mission to give fellow Londoners a touch of culture—or to quote from Wikipedia:
“to correct and purify the public taste of the country.”
At this point I
should give a quote from none other than Horace Walpole who, in 1743, offered
the following cutting insight about the society: "...a club, for which the
nominal qualification is having been in Italy, and the real one, being drunk:
the two chiefs are Lord Middlesex and Sir Francis Dashwood, who were seldom
sober the whole time they were in Italy” (Jeremy Black (1985), “The British and
the Grand Tour”, p.120).
Notwithstanding
the willingness of some members of the society to indulge themselves with the
finer things of life, the society funded archaeological expeditions, Italian
opera and, with the help of Sir Joshua Reynolds, helped to establish the Royal
Academy.
This print is
from the Society of Dilettani’s major two-volume publication of classical
antiquities and the elephant folio in which it was bound was limited to an
edition of 60 copies available only to the members. It is very rare.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please let me know your thoughts, advice about inaccuracies (including typos) and additional information that you would like to add to any post.