Nicolaes Berchem (aka Nicolaes Pietersz Berchem; Niclas
Berghem; Claes Berighem; Nicolaes Pietersz Berrighem) (1621/22–1683)
“The Resting
Herd” (Le troupeau en repos), c.1652, from a series of five related plates
featuring animals
Etching on fine
laid paper trimmed at the platemark and lined on a conservator’s support sheet.
Size: (sheet)
26.5 x 21.2 cm
Signed in top
right corner: "Berghem fe."
Numbered in the
lower right corner: "3" (signifying the third plate in the series of
five.)
State iii (of
iii [?])
Hollstein
10.III (F W H Hollstein 1949, “Dutch and Flemish etchings, engravings and
woodcuts c.1450-1700”, Amsterdam); Weigel 1843 297.10 (Rudolph Weigel 1843, “Suppléments
au Peintre-Graveur de Adam Bartsch, Vol.I”, Leipzig); Dutuit 1881-5 I.36.10 (Manuel
E Dutuit, “de l'Amateur d'Estampes”, 4 vols, Paris); Bartsch V.260.10 (Adam Bartsch
1803, ”Le Peintre graveur”, 21 vols, Vienna); TIB 7(5).10 (260) (Walter L
Strauss 1978, “The Illustrated Bartsch: Nretherlandish Artists”, vol. 5. p.55)
The British
Museum offers the following description of this print:
“Plate 3: The
Resting Herd. A herd of different animals (one cow, a horse, a donkey, three
goats and three sheep) resting, a shepherd leaning on a stick to the left,
trees and a wide landscape in the background; from a series of five prints
showing animals Etching” (http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=1662222&partId=1&searchText=Berchem+&page=7)
Condition: crisp
impression trimmed to the platemark and laid onto a conservator’s support
sheet. The sheet is in excellent condition but I can see a few dot-size holes
that are virtually invisible because the sheet is laid onto washi paper.
I am selling what is arguably Berchem’s masterpiece of etching—or at least one of his masterworks—for
the total cost of AU$214 (currently US$162.97/EUR150.85/GBP130.45 at the time
of posting this listing) including postage and handling to anywhere in the
world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this truly magnificent print that lends an impression
of grand scale to what is essentially a simple scene of rural life in the 17th
century, 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
To my eyes, Berchem’s
prints embody a spirit of grandeur even when the subject is a simple rural
scene like this one. In part, this grandeur—a notion which I will hesitantly define
as a sense of bigness, in terms of scale, and objective formality—is related to
the way in which Berchem composes his images. Essentially, Berchem’s
compositions are designed to create the illusion of voluminous space where the
portrayed subjects—in this scene: a
mule, a horse, a cow, sheep,
goats and a herdsman—have abundant room to move.
The notion of grandeur also
stems from the almost generic/classical way that Berchem represents his
featured subjects. For instance, when he represents a mule, he ensures that the
point of focus is on the mule’s large ears, or when he wishes to represent a
horse he ensures that the focus is on its head and its mane. Following in this
same selective process of focusing on key attributes, when Bechem rendered the
cow in this remarkable scene of animal abundance, the focus is on its eyes—I
personally love cow’s eyes so this choice of attribute makes complete sense to
me. In short, Berchem portrays his subject matter with the aim of showcasing
broad ideals about the forms represented so that trees and their foliage may
not be about a particular tree but the essence of trees—the “treeness” of trees
(to borrow a dollop of Platonism).
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