Heinrich Aldegrever (1501/2–55/61)
(Bartsch title)
“The Elders Accused of Adultery” (Les vieillards Láccusent dádultère), 1555, the
second of four plates in the series, “The Story of Susanna”
Engraving on
fine laid paper, trimmed at, or slightly within, the platemark and lined on a
conservator’s support sheet.
Size: (sheet)
11.7 x 8.4 cm
Signed with
monogram and dated on the tablet at lower left.
New Hollstein
(German) 31 (Aldegrever) (Hollstein, F W H, “The New Hollstein: German
engravings, etchings and woodcuts 1400-1700”, Amsterdam, 1996); Bartsch VIII.371.31 (Bartsch, Adam, Le
Peintre graveur, 21 vols, Vienna, 1803); Bartsch 16.30 (1980, p. 150).
The British
Museum offers the following description of this print:
“Plate 2:
Susanna accused of adultery; standing at centre in front of Daniel enthroned at
left; the two Elders standing at right; from a series of four engravings. 1555”
(http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=1507696&partId=1&searchText=aldegrever&page=2) (Note: Bartsch views that the moment
of accusation is directed at the Elders, whereas the BM views that the moment
of accusation is directed at Susanna.)
Condition: crisp
and richly inked impression, trimmed at or slightly within the platemark and
lined on a conservator’s support sheet of fine washi paper. Based on the superb
quality of this impression it is likely to be a lifetime impression. There is a loss of
the upper right corner that has been redrawn on the support sheet.
I am selling
this rare and marvellous impression by one of the most famous of the old master
printmakers who followed in the tradition of Durer (whose monogram design
Aldegrever has appropriated) and the Nuremberg “Little Masters” (vis. the Beham
brothers and Georg Pencz) whose designs Aldegrever also copied, for AU$620
(currently US$464.35/EUR436.11/GBP381.11 at the time of this listing) including
postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this museum quality engraving from the Renaissance era,
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
Aldegrever was
an industrious printmaker. In the twenty-eight years prior to his execution of
this engraving in 1555—arguably the final year of his life (the year of his
death is uncertain and is either 1555 or 1561)—Aldegrever had produced close to
300 engravings along with three etchings and ten woodcut designs.
Although his
prints, such as this engraving, acknowledge his immediate predecessors, such as
Albrecht Dürer whose monogram design he
appropriated and the Nuremberg
'Little Masters' (viz. the Beham brothers and Georg Pencz) from
whom he acquired many stylistic traits (e.g. small formats, densely layered
line work and compositions), there are unmistakable attributes in Aldegrever’s engravings
that are uniquely his own; the British Museum summaries these perfectly as: “slim, attenuated figures and puckered,
agitated drapery” (http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/search_the_collection_database/term_details.aspx?bioId=134630).
Artists, like
Aldegrever, who choose the demanding medium of engraving over etching are of a
special breed. After all, the length of time required to execute an engraving
is far greater than that required to make an etching. For instance, David
Landau and Peter Parshall (1994) in “The Renaissance Print: 1470–1550” advise
that documentary evidence regarding Dirk Vellert and the great Marcantonio
Raimondi’s engravings show that the shortest time recorded to produce an engraving
is seventeen days. By contrast, for “an etching there is a space of only four
days“(p. 30).
Of course,
Aldegrever’s choice to be an engraver instead of an etcher may be driven by the
delicacy of line that engravings can produce, but there is still another
consideration that may have guided him: the number of prints that can be
pulled/taken from an engraving plate compared to an etching plate. As a broad
guide to the difference, and being mindful that there are many variables that
come into play (viz. the type of metal used for the printing plate, the
printing techniques employed and the varying opinions determining when the
quality of the printed image has deteriorated), “A. J. J. Delen asserts that
engraving were good for about 200 impressions of ‘high quality,’ and etchings
only about 50 because of their relatively finer lines and shallow biting”
(Landau & Parshall, p. 31).
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