Unidentified
artist after Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo
(1727–180)
Copy after GD
Tiepolo’s etching, “Plate 2: The Flight into Egypt”. The date of this
impression is unknown, but as the print is on laid paper this suggests the nineteenth
century.
Etching on chine-collé
(?) on laid paper with significant plate tone and narrow margins.
Size: (sheet)
19.6 x 24 cm; (plate) 18.7 x 23.2 cm
GD Tiepolo’s complete
series of prints are illustrated and discussed in Colta Feller
Ives’s (1972) “Picturesque Ideas on the Flight into Egypt etched by Gi ovanni
Domenico Tiepolo”, The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
See also DeVesme
1906, 19 (De Vesme, Alexandre, “Le peintre-graveur italien”, Milan, 1906)
Condition: a
richly inked impression with narrow margins in excellent condition.
I am selling
this amateurish and possibly early copy of Tiepolo’s wonderful etching for AU$139
in total (currently US$106.38/EUR94.77/GBP82.04 at the time of posting this
listing) including postage and handling to anywhere in the world. If you are
interested in purchasing this visually arresting etching, please contact me
(oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make
the payment easy.
This amateurish
copy of GD Tiepolo’s famous etching needs to be compared to the original to see
the awkwardness of the drawing. I should say that the drawing skills exhibited
in this copy are truly dreadful—and I guess that I have—but, as I am trying to
sell the print, I need to point out one of the more interesting features: how
the artist has understood the trumpet blowing action of the advancing airborne
figure. Here the copyist has substituted the finely contoured strokes used by
Tiepolo to render this trumpet blower’s puffed-out cheeks with the implied
meaning of an inscribed circle. This is a clever idea.
Regarding this
image, Ives (1972) in her compendium of Tiepolo’s etchings for the series, offers
the following insights:
“With fanfare,
the allegorical figure Fame escorts a symbolic representation of Prince-Bishop
Carl Philipp von Grieffenklau. Two putti carry the bishop's miter and stole,
while an angel bears the Grieffenklau coat of arms above the fortress of
Marienberg, the palace of Würzburg prince-bishops from 1250 until 1750, when
the new Residenz was completed and decorated by the Tiepolos.”
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