Jaspar Isaac (publisher) (aka Gasper Isac; Jaspar Isac; Gaspard Isac; Jaspar Isacsz; Jasper
de Isaac) (1585–1654)
“Description des
Anciens Bains Romains”, c1620, published by Jaspar Isaac.
Copper
engraving on cream laid paper lined onto a conservator’s support sheet
Size: (sheet)
20.4 x 42.8 cm; (plate) 16.3 x 40 cm; (image borderline) 15.8 x 9.3 cm
Inscribed
within the image borderline: (lower left) ”Jaspar Isac ex”; (lower centre) “DESCRIPTION
DES ANCIENS BAINS ROMAINS”
Lettered below
the image borderline in six columns of four lines : “Voicy Le tableau ueritable
….Et met fin à tous Leurs esbȃs.”
Condition: an
exceptionally rare early impression (based on the lack of wear to the plate) with
generous margins in very good condition for its age (i.e. beyond minor tears in
the margins and a few light marks on the lower-right corner, there are no holes,
folds, abrasions, stains or foxing). The sheet has been laid upon an archival
washi paper support sheet.
I am selling
this graphic treasure from the Renaissance period for AU$302 (currently US$231.60/EUR198.72/GBP175.61
at the time of this listing) including postage and handling to anywhere in the
world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this incredibly rare, eye-opening fantasy of a Roman
orgy set in an ancient bath house, 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
I guess that this
engraving sums up my childhood fantasies of what the ancient communal Roman
baths might have been like: a big orgy. From what I have been able to discover
about this very long and action-filled print, the location of this particular
bath house is somewhere
around Bagnères- de- Bigorre. Sadly what remains of the structure is only to be
viewed in tantalising glimpses in local archaeological sites (see http://monuments.loucrup65.fr/thermesdebagneres.htm).
Although there
is enough lewd behaviour on show to keep one’s eyes wide open, I need to point
out one figure that might make an art historian’s jaw drop. This is the figure
seated in the centre foreground, just to the right of the building’s right
column, with a garland in her hair and her chin resting on her right hand.
Once this damsel
and her partner is located I can imagine that most viewers will dumbstruck.
After all, this lady and those around her—including the chap spraying water at
an exposed backside—are those adapted for Édouard Manet’s famous painting,
“Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe” (1863/4).
Of course this composition was appropriated by Manet from Raimondi’s engraving
after Raphael (see my earlier post featuring Marco Dente’s copy of Raimondi’s
print http://www.printsandprinciples.com/2016/10/marco-dentes-judgement-of-paris-after.html).
Alternatively, Manet may have appropriated the composition from Giorgione or
possibly Titian or even from the source that all these artists had (perhaps
unknowingly) taken their various adaptations: the bas-reliefs on the ancient
Roman sarcophagi held in Villa Medici and Villa Doria Pamphilj, Rome.
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