Jacob Andreas Friedrich Snr. (aka IA Fridrich—the name with
which he signs his prints) (1684–1751) (Note: Friedrich Snr. shares the same
first names as his son, Jacob Andreas Friedrich Jr. [1714-1779], who signs his
prints: "Jac.Andr. Fridrich”, hence my attribution of this plate to the
father.)
“Bubo, Noctua,
Onocrotalus: TAB. CCXLVI—Levitici Cap. XI. V. 17”, 1733, from Johann Jacob
Scheuchzer’s (1672–1733) “Phyica Sacra” or “Physique sacrée, ou Histoire
naturelle de la Bible, traduite du latin de M. Jean Jacques Scheuchzer,...
enrichie de figures en taille douce, gravées par les soins de Jean André
Pfeffel”
Engraving on
laid paper with full margins as published
Size: (sheet) 35.9
x 24.1 cm, (plate) 31.4 x 19.9 cm
Lettered at
upper right: “TAB. CCXLVI.
Lettered below
the image: (right) “LEVITICI Cap. XI. V. 17. / Bubo, Noctua, Onocrotalus.” ;
(left) the same text as inscribed on the lower right but written in German.
Inscribed at
lower left margin edge: "I. A. Fridrich sculps.”
Condition:
superb impression with age-toning to the left edge: otherwise in excellent
(near pristine) condition.
I am selling
this amazing and almost magical concoction of imagery touching on natural
history, landscape, medallion and numismatics by Friedrich the elder (see note
above) for a total cost of ... [deleted] including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this visually arresting print, please contact me
(oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make
the payment easy. (Note that I have other prints from the same series available
in the discussion, “Expression by juxtaposition: Kilian, Pintz, Orlik &
Carracci” (http://www.printsandprinciples.com/2012/10/kilian-pintz-orlik-carracci-expression.html)
This print has been sold
Few prints
catch the eye like this amazing mashup of imagery.
I simply love
the way the owl perches itself with rather sharp looking talons on the
portrayed ornate frame of the image. To my eyes, this owl acts as an intermediary
trompe-l'œil device (i.e. a trick illusion designed to fool the eye) between
the physical world in which the viewer inhabits and the pictorial world
inhabited by pelicans and an alpine scene beyond.
There is a lot
of information available about the 700 plates (of which this is one)
illustrating Scheuchzer’s famous “Phyica Sacra; for example, “’Physica Sacra,’
Johannes Jacob Scheuchzer, 1731: Guest Post by Morbid Anatomy’s Joanna
Ebenstein” (https://nyamcenterforhistory.org/2013/08/27/physica-sacra-johannes-jacob-scheuchzer-1731-guest-post-by-morbid-anatomys-joanna-ebenstein/)
Sadly, the underlining reason behind Scheuchzer’s
text and illustrations designed to correlate pseudo-science with the Old
Testament scriptures is a little too bizarre and so I will leave the
explanation to Wikipedia: “In his [Scheuchzer] ‘ Lithographia Helvetica’, he
described fossils as ‘plays of nature’ or alternately as leftovers from the
biblical Flood. Most famously, he claimed that a fossilized skeleton found in a
Baden quarry was the remains of a human who had perished in the deluge. This
claim, which seemed to verify the claims of Christian scripture, was accepted
for several decades after Scheuchzer's death, until 1811, when French
naturalist Georges Cuvier re-examined the specimen and showed that it was
actually a large prehistoric salamander.” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Jakob_Scheuchzer)
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