Cornelis
Bos (aka Cornelis Bosch; Cornelis Bus) (c1515–1556) or by an
unidentified artist after Bos
“Ornamental panel of grotesques in the style of the Vatican Loggie”
(descriptive title only), 1548, from the series of 6 plates, “Frisians with
grotesques, scrolls, fantasy animals, animals and scrolls”
Engraving on fine laid paper trimmed unevenly within the platemark
and re-margined with a support sheet.
Size: (support-sheet) 21.7 x 23.9 cm; (sheet trimmed unevenly) 4.2
x 7.8 cm
Inscribed on plate: (upper left) “1548”; (upper right) “C B”
Ref: Irene Margaretha de Groot 1988, “Ornamentprenten
in het Rijksprentenkabinet”, Amsterdam.
See the description of this print at the Riksmuseum: http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.445306.
See similar panels in the style of Vatican Loggie at the
British Museum: http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/search.aspx?searchText=Cornelis+Bos+Grotesque+panels+in+the+style+of+the+Vatican+Loggie
Condition: crisp impression without significant wear but trimmed
within the platemark and re-margined on a support sheet. The sheet is in good
condition (i.e. there are no tears, holes, folds, abrasions, significant stains
or foxing) with minor signs of use.
I am selling this VERY small engraving from the Renaissance era—interestingly
it was executed at the very time that Michelangelo had just commenced working
on his sculpture, “The Deposition” (aka “Bandini Pietà” or “The Lamentation
over the Dead Christ”)—for AU$189 (currently US$152.71/EUR123.04/GBP107.11 at
the time of posting this listing). Postage for this print is extra and will be
the actual/true cost of shipping.
If you are interested in acquiring this exceptional rare and early
engraving, 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
Mindful that Bos was expelled from Antwerp for heresy only four
years before he executed this tiny ornamental
panel, just looking at the whimsical
grotesques involved in the design gives a good idea that he liked to push
boundaries. For example, note the close—but not inoffensively close—arrangement of vines bound together by the hole in the portrayed
strapwork near the crotch of the naked female at the centre of the composition.
I must say at this point, however, that Bos’ designs are far less sexually
explicit than similar panels of grotesques by artists like Heinrich Aldegrever
executed around the same time; see for example http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.322645.
What makes Bos’ ornamental panels different and delicately elegant by
comparison with the densely worked compositions of his contemporaries is the
suggestion of airy three-dimensional space. What I mean by this comment is that
Bos chooses to leave the backgrounds of his designs blank (as opposed to the darkly
cross-hatched backgrounds of Aldegrever) and to ”weave” various pictorial elements,
like the vines, so that they flow in three-dimensions. One feature of the
weaving that I find particularly intriguing is the tail of the bird on the left. This tail creates a marvellous optical illusion as it is shown in front of the scrolled strap
and yet the bird is perched behind the strap.
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