Aegidius
Sadeler II (aka Gillis Sadeler; Egidius Sadeler; Ægedius Sadeler)
(c1570–1629)
“River Landscape with Farmhouse and Pilgrims” (TIB title);
“Mountain Landscape with Resting Travellers” (Rijksmuseum title), 1597–1629,
after a lost drawing by Pieter Stevens II (c1567–before 1632) from the series,
“Eight Bohemian Landscapes”, published by Aegidius Sadeler.
Etching and engraving on fine laid paper with narrow margins lined
on an archival support sheet.
Size: (sheet) 21.5 x 29.3 cm; (plate) 21 x 28.5 cm
Inscribed within the image border along the lower edge: (left)
“Petri. St. In:”; (left of centre) “Eg. Sa.ex.”
State ii or iv (of iv) (Note: state ii is signified by both
inscriptions having been rendered almost unreadable by the hatching while state
iii is inscribed on the right: “Marco Sadeler excudit.” In state iv this
publisher’s details are erased.)
TIB 72 (Part 2, Supplement) 7201.271 S1 (Walter L Strauss &
Isabelle de Ramaix [Eds.] 1998, “The Illustrated Bartsch”, vol. 72, Part 2
[Supplement], p. 73); Hollstein Dutch 262-1 (2) (Hollstein 1980, vol. 21, no.
262); Le Blanc, no. 186; Wurzbach, no. 96; Nagler 1835—52, nos. 199–204
The Rijksmuseum offers the following description of this print:
“Mountain landscape with resting travellers in the foreground. A
river valley in the background. The last picture of an eight-part series of
Bohemian landscapes.” (http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.167970)
Condition: marvellously crisp and well-printed impression with narrow
margins. The sheet is in excellent condition (i.e. there are no tears, folds,
abrasions or foxing) but there is a light brown stain in the narrow margin at
the upper left and the lower left corner is slightly chipped. The sheet is laid
onto a support sheet of washi paper.
(Note that this is the second impression
of this marvellous print that I have listed and the earlier impression has been
sold.)
I am selling this superb impression of a very rare print for the
total cost of AU$430 (currently US$335.52/EUR279.79/GBP248.32 at the time of
posting this listing) including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are interested in purchasing this remarkably detailed and
important print, 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
Landscapes executed at the time of Aegidius Sadeler were a rich
amalgam of symbolic meanings.
For example the inclusion of the dead skeletons of trees shown
among living trees on the distant rocky hill is not an incidental detail. The
grouping of living with dead trees projects—for a 17th century audience—the
vanitas meaning about the transience of life: all living things must ultimately
die—like the memento mori symbolism of a skull. Added to this projected
meaning, the juxtaposition of the dead trees with living trees also carries the
connotation that life is a cycle, in the sense that trees may die but they will
be reborn again with the next generation of trees.
Another feature of prints in the 17th century is that many
landscape artists liked to show trees “clutching” onto hillsides with their
exposed roots. Again, this motif of exposed tree roots is not incidental.
Instead, the symbolism was potent for early landscape artists as it signified
life forces at work in nature drawing energy from beneath the earth and up
through the trees to the heavens above.
From a personal standpoint, I find the
comparison of how 17th century artists valued the landscape with the way that
Chinese and Japanese artists valued their scholar stones/rocks fascinating. For
those who may be interested in this topic, I have written an explanation about
the attributes of Scholar Stones in my blog; see “Ugly Beauty—Five Principles”
(Part 1) http://www.printsandprinciples.com/2014/01/ugly-beauty-five-principles-part-1.html
and (Part 2) http://www.printsandprinciples.com/2014/02/ugly-beauty-five-principles-part-2.html
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