Wenzel
Hollar (aka Wenceslaus Hollar; Václav Hollar) (1607–77)
“Head and bare, sinewy neck of a bald man”, 1648, after a drawing
by Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) in the Royal Collection at Windsor (RL 19003
recto) from the series of “Caricatures and deformities after Leonardo”
(Pennington, 2002, cat. nos. 1558–1610B)
Etching on wove paper.
Size: (sheet) 12.3 x 10.7 cm; (plate) 6.8 x 4.7 cm
Inscribed within the plate: “Leonardo / da Vinci inu: / WHollar
fec. / 1648.”
Nineteenth-century impression of the only state (?). I understand
that there were three early editions published in Antwerp of the series of
which this plate features—but without the creation of fresh states: 1645 (this
edition may not have included this plate as it was executed in 1648), 1648, and
1666.
Pennington (2002) 1578; New Hollstein (German) 1018 (Hollar)
Richard Pennington (2002) offers the following description of this
print in “A descriptive catalogue of the etched work of Wenceslaus Hollar
1607–1677”, Cambridge University Press:
“Bust almost full face of bald elderly man looking down. He is
clean-shaven and the bones and sinews of neck and chest are very prominent.”
(p. 288)
The British Museum offers the following description of this print:
“Head and bare, sinewy neck of a bald man, directed to left, head
tilted to look down; after Leonardo da Vinci. 1648” (http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=3491378&partId=1&searchText=hollar+1648&page=1)
Condition: well-printed impression on laid paper with signs of
wear to the plate. The sheet is in pristine condition with generous margins
(varying in width but approximately 3 cms).
I am selling this exquisite etching by one of the greatest
printmakers of history, Wenzel Hollar, reproducing a drawing by one of the
greatest artists of the Renaissance, Leonardo da Vinci, for the total cost of
AU$98 (currently US$78.13/EUR65.36/GBP57.90 at the time of this listing)
including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are interested in purchasing this small and historically
influential print that showcased Leonardo’s drawings to 17th century
artists, 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
What may come as surprise regarding this etching and others by
Hollar after drawings by Leonardo is that—according to the distinguished writer,
Sir Kenneth Clark, in “A catalogue of the drawings of Leonardo … at Windsor
Castle, Cambridge”, 1935, the vol. of text, Appendix B, p. xlvii—the “drawings
are so repulsive to us were yet the first of Leonardo’s drawings to be appreciated
in the seventeen and eighteenth centuries” (Pennington 2002, p. 272). This view
of these prints by Hollar is shared by Richard T Godfrey (1994) in "Wencelaus
Hollar: A Bohemian Artist in England” who proposes that “Leonardo’s drawings of
grotesque heads are not in the strict sense caricatures; nonetheless, through
the intermediary of Hollar’s prints, they exerted enormous influence of the development
of the caricature in England in the eighteenth century” (p. 100).
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