Enea Vico (1523–1567)
Note: TIB lists
this print (30.493-Copy [368]) as a copy after the original print by Enea Vico (30.494
[368]), but current opinion has reversed the attribution and this print is now viewed
to be the original and the print catalogued by Bartsch as the original is now
viewed as the copy. See the curator of the BM’s comment for the candlestick BM no. Nn,7.16.6.
“Candlestick
with a Faun and a Bacchante”, 1552, plate 4 from a series of four designs for
candlesticks (Note that there is actually five designs in the series but the
fifth plate is unnumbered but bears the publisher’s Salamanca's address (see BM
no. 1873,0111.68)
Engraving on
laid paper (with water mark) trimmed along the image borderline
Size: (sheet)
25.1 x 17.8 cm
Hand-inscribed
in brown ink at lower-right corner: “4” (Note: I suspect that the hand
inscription is to “replace” the missing plate number where the sheet has been
damaged)
Berlin 1939
1126 (under Vico) (P Jessen 1939, “Katalog der Ornamentstichsammlung der
Staatlichen Kunstbibliothek Berlin”, Berlin); Guilmard 1880/1 289.24 (under
Vico) (Désiré Guilmard 1801, “Les Maitres Ornemanistes: Écoles Française,
Italienne, Allemande et des Pays-Bas (Flamande et Hollandaise)”, Paris, E Pron
et Cie); TIB 30.493-Copy (368]) (John Spike & Walter L Strauss [Eds.] 1985,
“The Illustrated Bartsch:Italian Masters of the Sixteenth Century [Enea Vico]”,
New York, Abaris Books, p. 330); Bartsch XV.368.494 (as copy after Vico) (Adam Bartsch
1803, “Le Peintre graveur”, 21 vols, Vienna)
The British
Museum offers the following description of this print:
“Plate 4:
candlestick decorated with mascarons and, below, a figurative scene
representing a youth and a bacchante playing music. 1552 Engraving”
Condition: an
exceptionally rare early impression (based on the lack of wear to the plate) trimmed
along the image borderline. The upper and lower right corners are missing and have
been restored. The sheet shows signs age toning appropriate to a print that is
close to 500 years old. There may be areas of light abrasion but the tonal unevenness
in the image—especially in the treatment of the background—is very similar to
the unevenness exhibited in the copy reproduced in TIB (1985) p. 330.There are
pencil notations, two collectors’ ink stamps and remnants of mounting hinges
(verso).
I am selling
this Renaissance period engraving that has excited many contemporary scholars
to verify who the real master is that executed it—currently the argument and
evidence points to one of the truly great masters, Enea Vico—for AU$349
(currently US$267.64/EUR229.65/GBP202.94 at the time of this listing) including
postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this finely executed engraving that embodies the spirit
of the Renaissance in the use line and subject portrayed, 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
Sometimes the
gate-keepers of history change their minds about the attribution on artworks. This
is certainly the case with this elegant engraving of a candlestick holder. What
makes it “special” in terms of a change in attribution is that the evidence is
simply that the line-work is too good to be a copy of an engraving by the great
Renaissance master, Enea Vico. As a corollary, what was once considered to be
the original engraving by Vico of the candlestick holder is now relegated to
being the copy of this print. The reason: the exhibited line-work in the former
“original” Vico is too perfunctory to be by the hand of the master.
Fascinating!
(The curator of
the British Museum outlines the dispute with appropriate citations in reference
to another candlestick holder from the same series: http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=1514546&partId=1&searchText=Nn,7.16.6&page=1)
If I may
contribute my own thoughts regarding the attribution, I agree with the scholars
who believe that this is the original Vico, but my reason is slightly different
to the inherent quality of the draughtsmanship. Based on the convention that
arose during the Renaissance period of portraying subjects lit from the
top-front-left and that engraved plates were based on preliminary drawn studies,
the engraving which to my mind is likely to be the original is the one that is
a mirror image of the lighting convention because the printing process “reverses”
images: this print.
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