Anne
Claude Philippe de Tubières, Comte de Caylus (aka Caylus; Anne
Claude de Caylus; Anne Claude de Pestels) (1692–1765)
“Le Saint Esprit descendant sur les Apôtres” (The Holy Spirit
descending on the Apostles), c1729–64, from the series, “Recueil d'estampes
d'après les plus beaux tableaux et d'après les plus beaux desseins qui sont en
France” (Collection of prints from the most beautiful paintings and from the
most beautiful designs that are in France”) (aka “Recueil Crozat”; “Cabomet Croza”),
after the drawing by Giovanni Battista
Lenardi (1656–1704).
Etching and aquatint imitating a chiaroscuro woodcut, printed in
two shades of brown, on laid paper with wide margins (as published).
Size: (sheet) 50.5 x 36.8 cm; (plate) 39.7 x 25.6 cm; (image
borderline) 36 x 24.9 cm
Lettered below the image borderline in three lines of French text:
“Le S.t Esprit descendant sur les Apôtres. / Dessein de Jean Baptiste Lenardi,
qui est dans le Cabinet de Mr Crozat / Gravé à l'eau forte par Mr le C... de
C... et en bois sous sa conduite par Nicolas le Sueur […] 130”.
IFF 308 (undescribed state) (Inventaire du Fonds Français:
Bibliothèque Nationale, Département des Estampes, Paris, 1930)
The British Museum offers the following description of this print:
“The Pentecost, with the Virgin standing at centre, surrounded by
the Apostles, and the Holy Spirit flying above them; after a drawing by
Lenardi.”
Condition: near faultless impression that is crisp, well-inked and
well-printed with full margins as published. The sheet is in very good
condition for its age but the margins are slightly dusty and show minor signs
of use (e.g. the lower left corner is bumped and there is a pencil notation at
the lower right edge).
I am selling this 18th century curiosity of an intaglio
print (viz. etching with aquatint) that is skilfully crafted to simulate the attributes/“look”
of a chiaroscuro woodcut (i.e. a woodcut involving more than one tone of a colour)
for AU$204 (currently US$154.56/EUR132.04/GBP115.82 at the time of posting this
print) including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are interested in purchasing this historically important
print showcasing an 18th century artist’s somewhat deceptive practice,
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
Although this intaglio print was clearly intended to deceive the
viewer into believing that the image is a relief print, the artist’s motivation
was more complex than simply a case of skulduggery.
After all, comte de Caylus was commissioned to execute this print as
a late addition to the grand catalogue project, “Recueil Crozat”, by the French
collector, Pierre Crozat (1665–1740), who had the vision to create a paper
museum reproducing famous paintings and drawings of the era. In the first two volumes
(published 1729 and 1737 respectively), Crozat commissioned woodcut prints, but
after his death, the famous art dealer and publisher, François Basan (1723–1797), replaced the
woodcut prints in the “Recueil” with intaglio prints such as this one.
Mindful that the decision to mix mediums—or at least the
superficial attributes of mediums—may have been a requirement of the “Recueil”
project overseen by Basan helps to explain comte de Caylus’ motivation. After
reading Margaret Morgan Grasselli’s (2003) essay in “Colorful Impressions: The
Printmaking Revolution in Eighteenth-Century France” (cat. National Gallery of
Art, Washington), however, I have a better understanding of comte de Caylus’ choice
to use etched line. For example, Grasselli, proposes that intaglio lines “captured
the quality of pen lines in a way that woodcut line blocks could not” (p. 6).
In short, comte de Caylus’ motivation was not simple skulduggery, Instead
his approach may have been a requirement set by Basan and personal insight
about what was needed to make a strong reproductive translation of Lenardi’s
drawing.
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