Hendrik Goltzius (aka Hendrick Goltzius) (1558–1617)
“The Agony in
the Garden”, 1597, from the series, “The Passion”
Engraving on
fine laid paper trimmed at the platemark and lined onto a
conservator’s support sheet.
Size (sheet)
20.2 x 13.6 cm
Lettered with
monogram and dated in lower left: "A.o 97 / HG". Numbered in lower
left: “2.”
New Hollstein
(Dutch & Flemish) 18 (Hendrick Goltzius); Hirschmann 1921 22; Hollstein
22.I; Strauss 1977 342; Bartsch III.20.28; TIB 3(3).28 (20) p. 35.
The British
Museum offers the following description of this print: “Plate 2: Christ praying
on the Mount of Olives at Gethsemane; an angel appears to Christ and addresses
Him; in the foreground three of Christ's apostles are huddled together and fast
asleep; beyond a contingent of soldiers emerge from a gateway at right. 1597 Engraving”
(http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=1470082&partId=1&searchText=goltzius+passion&page=1)
The curator of
the BM advises that there is a preparatory drawing for this print in Leipzig
(Reznicek 34)
See also the
copy of this print at the British Museum by Abraham Hogenberg (fl.1590–1656).
Close comparison of this print with the copy and the original Goltzius held by
the BM confirms that impression is from the hand of Goltzius.
Condition:
crisp silvery impression with the lower right corner restored and a tear at the
middle right side (now supported by the conservator’s sheet of fine washi paper
upon which the whole print is laid). There is also minor areas discolouration
towards the lower left corner.
I am selling
this original engraving by Goltzius for the total cost of AU$440 (currently
US$337.03/EUR312/GBP270.20 at the time of posting this listing) including
postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing rare print from 1597 by one of the most famous
printmakers of that time, 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
In an earlier
post also featuring a print by Goltzius—or more correctly, a print reproducing
a Goltzius’ engraving by an unidentified printmaker—I lightly touched upon the mercurial
element that distinguishes a copy from an original print. In this earlier post,
I used the word, “life”, to describe this difficult to define element. What I
meant by this vague term is the notion of “life” being an approximation for
the visual expression of an artist’s spirit and personal vision embodied in the
nuanced phrasing of each line (i.e. transitional changes in the thickness and
shape of the line) and treatment of the portrayed subject.
In this
original print by the hand of Goltzius, for instance, note how Goltzius
portrays the sleeping figures (Jesus’ disciples) as if they are genuinely
asleep as opposed to perfunctorily drawn models arranged to give the appearance
that they are asleep. This projection of authenticity is not something that is
simply about portraying the figures with their eyes shut. Rather, it’s about the
way in which each mark is inscribed and the accumulative effect of line, tone
and organisation that come together to express the notion of sleep. Note, for
instance, the void of darkness surrounding the heads of the two further away disciples and the spiralling rhythms
in figures’ poses that connote the state of sleep.
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