Jacques
Callot (1592–1635)
“Standing nobleman with hat, facing right”, c1620–23, from the series of 12
plates, “La Noblesse” (aka “Gentlemen from Lorraine”), from a late 18th/early
19th century edition.
Etching on wove paper trimmed unevenly close to the platemark and
backed with a support sheet.
Size: (unevenly trimmed sheet) 14.8 x 9.6 cm: (plate) 14.5 x 9.2
cm
Inscribed on plate at lower left corner: “Callot”
Lieure 1927 559 (J Lieure 1927, “Jacques Callot”, 3 vols, Paris,
Editions de la Gazette des Beaux-Arts); Meaume 1860 670 (Édouard Meaume 1860,
“Recherches sur la vie et les ouvrages de Jacques Callot”, 2 volumes, Paris).
The Rijksmuseum offers the following description of this print:
“Standing gentleman, dressed in a cape trimmed with fur, shoes
with rosettes on the feet, a hat with wide brim on the head, the hands folded
in front of the belly. In the background a city square along which a river
flows. This print is part of a series of 12 prints with noblemen in costumes
worn in Lorraine in the first quarter of the 17th century; half of the series
are men's suits, the other half shows women's costumes.”
See also the following description of this print offered by the
British Museum:
“Man standing in profile to right, with
hands placed before his stomach; he wears a hat and a fur-trimmed cape; a
square in a city in the background.
Condition: crisp and well-printed impression, trimmed unevenly
with thread margins and backed with a support sheet of archival (millennium
quality) washi paper. The sheet is in excellent condition (i.e. there are no
tears, holes, folds, abrasions, significant stains or foxing but there are
minor signs of handling and age toning).
I am selling this wonderful example of a print executed with
Callot’s famous etching needle that he developed, called the “échoppe”, which
allowed etchers to make swelling lines like engravers—note in particular the
shading lines on the gentleman’s hat—for AU$164 (currently
US$123.94/EUR106.24/GBP93.20 at the time of posting this print) including
postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are interested in purchasing this remarkable 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
Last night when I planned to write a discussion about this etching
of an elegant gentleman, I was so tired that by the time that I had donned my
thinking cap and made sketchy notes about its attributes I fell off my chair
asleep.
Well ... it’s morning now and I’m presently waiting between flights
on a long trip and I’ve decided to see whether my brain is going to help me
with saying meaningful things about this print.
I’d better begin this discussion by proposing that this etching is
historically significant. In a quick moment of brainstorming I think that I’m
correct as this print showcases at least three pivotally important attributes
marking a change in the course of printmaking history.
The first of these attributes is the swelling lines shaping the
form of the gentleman’s hat. These lines are a perfect example of Callot’s use
of the échoppe etching needle that he invented/developed. This tool allowed
etchers for the first time to make the same type of lines with varied thickness
as engravers.
The second attribute marking this print as historically important
is the difference in line quality separating the dark and emphatically strong
lines depicting the noble from the light and delicately fine lines depicting
the town square in the distance. This separation of the two qualities of line
was the outcome of another development in the art of etching by Callot: a
refined technical process of “stopping out” areas on the printing plate during
etching.
The third attribute is the cleanliness of the white spaces—the
untouched/undrawn areas—of the print. This quality may seem insignificant, but,
in terms of the history of printmaking, it is amazing. Callot was able to
achieve this “cleanliness” by concocting a fresh formula for his etching
ground. This new formula helped to overcome the areas of foul biting that were
previously common in prints.
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