Wenzel
Hollar (aka Wenceslaus Hollar; Václav Hollar) (1607–77)
“Head of a young man”, 1648, after a lost painting by Hans Holbein
(the younger) (1497/8–1543)
Etching on wove paper.
Size: (sheet) 12 x 10.7 cm; (plate) 6.8 x 4.7 cm
Inscribed above the head: (left) “HHolbein inu;'; (right) “WHollar
fecit / 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) 1551; New Hollstein (German) 1013 (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, r. profile, of a clean-shaven young man with straight hair.
He wears a soft, flat cap, the brim cut into panels, and a doublet with a
slashed collar.” (p. 271)
The British Museum offers the following description of this print:
“Portrait bust of a young man in profile to right, wearing a soft
cap with slashed brim and doublet with slashed collar; after Hans Holbein the
Younger. 1648” (http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=3491302&partId=1&searchText=hollar+1648&page=1)
Condition: well-printed impression with signs of wear to the plate
on laid paper in pristine condition with generous margins (varying, but
approximately 3 cms).
I am selling this exquisite etching by one of the greatest
printmakers of history, Wenzel Hollar, reproducing a now lost painting by Hans
Holbein (the younger)—an artist famous for his paintings of the court of Henry
VIII (amongst others)—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 delicately
executed Tudor period portrait, 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
Although the whereabouts of the original painting by Holbein upon which
this etching is based is unknown, there may be a very simple explanation to
this puzzle, as revealed by Richard T Godfrey (1994) in “Wencelaus Hollar: A
Bohemian Artist in England.” Godfrey points out that, as is the case with Hollar’s
etched copies of Leonardo’s drawings (see the earlier post featuring one of
these prints), Hollar “could show fidelity to his models” (i.e. precise
line-by-line faithful copies of the original drawings by Leonardo), “…yet he
would sometimes combine elements from several sheets to make a single etched
design” (p. 13). In short, what I am proposing (without being privy to more
information than is currently available) this portrait may be a concoction—a
copy of a portrait by Holbein that never existed at all! Of course, I doubt
that this is the case but it is a lovely thought and would resolve the question
of whatever happened to Holbein’s portrait.
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