John Samuel Agar (1773–1858)
“Plate XXX”, 1808, printed by T Bensley,
published by T Payne and J White in 1809 for the Society of Dilettanti in
“Specimens of Ancient 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.
Stipple
engraving on chine-collé on thick laid paper lined on a fine washi paper
support sheet.
A proof impression before lettering for publication.
Size: (sheet) 43.6
x 33.2 cm; (plate) 35.9 x 31 cm; (chine-collé) 29.7 x 23 cm
Condition: strong
impression with margins. There are light surface marks and a minor spot of discolouration;
otherwise the sheet is in good condition (i.e. there are no tears, holes,
significant stains or foxing).
I am selling
this rare stipple engraving, 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
Even a quick
glance at this superb study will leave little doubt that it has
more than a little leaning towards neoclassical tastes. Such an assessment
is correct, as this engraving was commissioned by the Society of Dilettanti that had taken
on (according to what I have gleaned from Wikipedia) the full moral duty in
London “to correct and purify the public taste of the country” by exposing the
impressionable to artefacts from the classical world. Although the ambition of
the society may seem a little haughty in its conceit, the outcome is that the
society funded archaeological expeditions, Italian opera and, with the help of
Sir Joshua Reynolds, helped to establish the Royal Academy, as well as publishing
the two-volume book in which this print is featured. (Note that this impression
is likely to be a proof before publication as it does not have the lettered
details of the published prints).
Although the
grand vision and mission of the Society of Dilettanti may not be served very
well by Horace Walpole’s (1743) caustic comment: "...a club, for which the
nominal qualification is having been in Italy, and the real one, [is] 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), there were members of the Society that had a very
interesting outlook on art. For example, one of the luminaries of the Society
and a central figure in the publication of this book is Richard Payne Knight (1750–1824)—an
authority on classical art and an active archaeologist. My understanding of Knight’s
vision of art is that he saw paintings and music—and no doubt Agar’s print—as
addressing “the organs of sight and hearing." By contrast, the art of poetry
and sculpture appeal "entirely to the imagination and passions." More
interesting with regard to this print, Knight had the curiously interesting belief
that (again, according to Wikipedia) “artists should seek to reproduce primal
visual sensations, not the mental interpretative processes which give rise to
abstract ideas.” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Payne_Knight).
In other words, the neoclassicism of Agar’s print.
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.