Lambert Lombard (1515–1566)
“Venus Cupid”, 1568,
from the series “The Four Seasons”, published by Hieronymus Cock (1518–1570), Antwerp.
Engraving on
fine laid paper, trimmed within the image borderline and lined on a conservator’s
support sheet.
Size: (sheet)
25.7 x 19.1 cm
Inscribed within
the image borderline: “H. Cock exeudebat. 156[8]”
(Note that the impression
held by the Rijksmuseum has the inscription that is partially erased in this
impression: “Lambertus Lombard Invent”)
Lettered below
the image borderline: “VER PINGIT VARIO GEMMANTIA PRATA COLORE” (Anth. Lat.
569: “Spring paints the jewelled meadows in various colours”)
The Rijksmuseum
offers the following description of this print:
“Presentation
of the spring in a series with the four seasons. Venus and Cupid sitting under
a tree in a spring landscape. Left behind is to create a group of young people
music. Among the show a Latin verse from an epigram in the Anthologia Latina.”
(http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.345524)
Riggs 173 (Timothy
Allan Riggs 1977, “Hieronymus Cock, printmaker and publisher:, p. 353, cat.nr. 173); Hollstein Dutch 19-22; Hollstein 20.
Condition: good
impression, trimmed slightly within the platemark. The sheet is in poor
condition with many signs of its considerable age, but the wear, losses and
tears have been conserved and the sheet is now lined on a support sheet of fine
washi paper.
I am selling
this exceedingly rare engraving from the Renaissance era for the total cost of
AU$326 (currently US$246.26/EUR230.35/GBP119.15 at the time of this listing)
including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this rare print by a famous old master and the teacher
of Hendrick Goltzius (amongst others), 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
This very rare
engraving by Lombard exemplifies not only his contribution to Netherlandish art
in the sense that crystallises his ideas about the Italian Renaissance (viz.
the formality of the arrangement of the figures into a pyramidal form as well
as the use of pictorial devices such as the rendering of the sky in fine
horizontal lines) following his excursion to Rome in 1537 by order of the prince-bishop
of Liège (Belguim), Erard de la Marck, to buy works of art, but it also exhibits
a critical approach to engraving that was later to be developed by one of his most celebrated students: the
legendary, Hendrick Goltzius (1558–1617).
Regarding
Lombard’s influence on Goltzius, note for instance his treatment of Venus’
breasts. Here, the concentric circles that model the breasts are similar to those used by Goltzius in his treatment of form. Of course, Goltzius took these
concentrically aligned contour marks and layered them and in his later prints
famously added a dot in the diamond-shaped spaces arising where the curves
crossed—a device that I have discussed in earlier posts: the “dotted
lozenge.”
Another device
that Goltzius arguably acquired from Lombard is a leaning to exaggerate the
bumps and dents on the surface of forms; for example, note the treatment of
Venus’ drapery. Goltzius developed this fascination with bumps to an extreme
level in some of his later prints where forms seem almost lobulated with his obsession—his
so-called “Spangerisms.”
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.