Antonio
Tempesta (1555?–1630)
“Civilis’ Troops Crossing the Maas River” (TIB title), 1611/12,
possibly after Otto van Veen (1556–1629) (according to the Rijksmuseum [see RP-P-OB-77.918),
plate 11 from the series of 37 plates (including the frontispiece/titlepage),
“The War of the Romans Against the Batavians” (Romanorvm et Batavorvm
societas), published in the first edition (1612) with Latin letterpress text verso.
Etching on laid paper trimmed to the image borderline and backed with a support sheet.
Size: (sheet) 16.5 x 21.1 cm
Inscribed on the plate with the artist’s monogram within the image
borderline: (at lower right corner) “AT”.
Lettered below the image borderline: (in five lines of Dutch text
at left): “Civilis de Ceulsche daer hy op verbittert was (mits dien sy hun /
vaderlandt verloochenende, eenen Roomschen naem, tweten Agrippynen /
aenghenomen hadden) verslaghen hebbende, schickt syn volck over de Mase, / quellende
de Geldersche, Triersche, ende Terovaensch frontieren.”: (center within a
circle) “11”; (in five lines of Latin text at right) “Civilis caesis Ubijs (quos,
eo quod vetus exuentes no: / men, Romanum assumsissent, exosos habebat) suos /
trans Mosam dirigit, qui Menapios, Treuiros, et / Morinos fines infestant,
damnaque varia inferunt.”
Latin text on verso from Tacitus’ “Histories,” IV, 28.
(Note: TIB [Volume 35, “Commentary: Part 2” offers the following
insights about the letterpress text on verso; “…Civilis’s military operations
against neighboring tribes are described, especially against the Ubii which he
hated more than the others because they had romanized their name and now called
themselves Agrippinenses” [p. 121 (.507)].)
State i (of ii) Note: TIB lists this impression as “SI II” and the
impressions without the Latin text verso as “SI I2”. In the second state the
plate is “heavily retouched” and with “PLANCHE XII INVASION DE CIVILIS / DANS
LA GAULE BELGIQUE” lettered above the image borderline (amongst other changes).
TIB 35 (17).570 (145) (Sebastian Buffa (ed.) 1984, “The
Illustrated Bartsch: Antonio Tempesta: Italian Masters of the Sixteenth
Century”, vol. 35, Abaris Books, New York, p. 299); Bartsch XVII.145.570 i/ii (Adam
von Bartsch 1803, “Le Peintre graveur,” Vienna); Nagler XVIII.179.560-.595 (G K
Nagler 1835–52, “Neus allgemeines Künstler-Lexicon” [22 vols.]).
See also the description of this print at the Rijksmuseum:
and at the Metropolitan Museum
of Art:
Condition: superb early impression from the first state that is richly
inked, crisp and well-printed with Latin letterpress text from verso faintly
visible recto (as is appropriate and expected for a print from this early
edition). The sheet is in near faultless condition (i.e. there are no tears,
holes, folds, abrasions, stains or foxing), trimmed to the image borderline and
backed with a support sheet of archival (millennium quality) washi paper.
I am selling this strong lifetime impression of this magnificent etching for the total cost of AU$195 (currently US$146.20/EUR122.79/GBP108.10 at
the time of posting this) including postage and handling to anywhere in the
world.
If you are interested in purchasing this near pristine etching
from the early 1600s, 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
Please see my earlier discussion about another print from the same
series by Tempesta:
What I did not discuss in my precious discussion is the importance
of the uprising and battle by the Batavians against Rome (69–70 CE) led by
Claudius Civilis shown in this scene on the rearing horse in the foreground.
What I find fascinating about this event is that despite the only ancient description
of the battle being the account of it by Tacitus in his “Histories” (IV, 13–V, 36), the
uprising was well known and perceived in the 16th century (according
to Eckhard Leuschner [2007] in the second “Commentary” volume of TIB’s
catalogue raisonné for Tempesta, p. 104) as “a kind of national founding saga
of the Northern Netherlands”. Interestingly, the letterpress text printed on
the back of each print in the series is a quotation from Tacitus relevant to the print on the page immediately following it.
At the time of the print’s execution, this uprising by Civilis was
seen to parallel (to again use Leuschner’s words [op. cit.]) “the recent battle
of the Netherlands against Spanish and Catholic domination” and, importantly, the
historical equivalence of the past and present battles “must have been obvious
to every Dutch buyer of the booklet” in which the series were published.
To ensure that the booklet with this series of prints had wider
appeal than just the Dutch market, the choice of Tempesta, as an Italian etcher
rather than choosing a Dutch printmaker, must have been a major consideration. Not
only would Tempesta’s standing as an active Italian printmaker give the
publication an introduction to the Italian market but it would also flavour the depiction of the
battle with a subtle note of reconciliation between the warring parties.
Regarding
this wish to create an air of reconciliation, Leushcner (2007) advises that the
frontispiece to the booklet is “graced” with the “personifications of Rome and
the Netherlands shaking hands” (op. cit.).
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