Daniel Hopfer (1471–1536)
“St Paul at a
banquet with the excluded clergy guarded by the devil”, c.1520, the lower-left
panel in the composite print, “Christ’s Mission to the Apostles and Other New
Testament Scenes” (Bartsch title) or “Food regulations from the Gospels and the
Acta Apostolorum”, published in the 17th century edition by David
Funck (fl. 1682–1709) in “Opera Hopferiana”, Nuremberg.
Etching with
German text on laid paper with watermark, trimmed at the image borderline.
Size: (sheet) 14.8
x 13.8 cm
Hollstein 35.II; Bartsch (1803) VIII.481.32; Bartsch (1981) 17.32 (481); Nagler 32
According to
the British Museum, the original plate is signed with monogram in the plate at centre.
Lettered above each scene with corresponding passage from the Bible.
Regarding the
publication of the Hopfer’s etchings, Robert A Koch (1981) in Vol. 7 of TIB
advises in his editor’s note: “In the 17th century a Nuremberg publisher named
David Funck numbered 230 of [… Hopfer’s] plates and issued a volume entitled
‘Opera Hopferiana.’ In 1802 a publisher named C. Wilhelm Silberberg in
Frankfurt-am-Main reissued 92 plates with the Funck numbers in a volume which
he also entitled ‘Opera Hopferiana.’ These plates were printed on unnumbered
pages of a heavy wove paper.” Mindful of the two editions, as this impression
is on wove paper it is from Funck's 17th century edition.
The British
Museum offers the following description of the whole print of which this
impression is a part:
“Food
regulations from the Gospels and the Acta Apostolorum; six scenes illustrating
various Bible passages; including Christ sending out his apostles; instructing
them on what to eat on their journeys; the clean and the unclean; St Paul at a
banquet from which the clergy, guarded by a devil, are excluded; St Paul
showing Christ to a congregation; St Paul at a wedding; impression from the
Funck series. Etching”
Condition: richly
inked, crisp impression trimmed at, or close to, the image borderline, with
light foxing and remnants of mounting hinges (verso); otherwise in excellent
condition.
I am selling this iron etching by the legendary Daniel Hopfer—the first artist to use etching for
prints on paper—that is a panel in a larger composite six-panel plate for the
total cost of AU$320 (currently US$245.32/EUR226.94/GBP193.18 at the time of
posting this listing) including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this small masterpiece 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
Once I saw at
the far right of this image the tiny devil claiming ownership of the clergy who
were excluded from St Paul’s feast (see 1 Corinthians 2:16) I fell in love with
this print. Beyond the devil, close inspection of the scene shows many other
fascinating details. For example, I almost did not see at the centre of the
composition the haloed dove of the Holy Spirit almost camouflaged in the fruit
tree—the apple tree of the Garden of Eden? No doubt, Hopfer chose to place this
symbolic bird at this spot so that it would be viewed as the emissary for God’s
word promulgated by the Heaven borne Jesus as he points to the faithful at the
banquet table. Note also the sword lying on the ground at St Paul’s feet and
the woven wicker fence separating the clergy from the feast. Indeed, there is
so much “happening” in this print that I can’t help but think of the great
Stanley Spencer (1891–1959) and his tightly orchestrated compositions.
Although I
cannot read the German text lettered across the top of the image I like to
imagine that it might address one of my favourite words of advice given by
Jesus to his disciples: be “wise as
serpents, and harmless as doves” (Matthew 10:16)
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