NOTE THAT THIS IS A SECOND COPY OF THE SAME PRINT THAT HAS BEEN LISTED BEFORE (the previous impression has been sold)
Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietricy (aka Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich) (1712–74)
“The Small Waterfalls at Tivoli” (“Die
kleinen Wasserfälle bei Tivoli”, Link title); “Arcadian landscape with
waterfall” (“Arcadisch landschap met waterval”, Rijksmuseum title), 1744,
published by Johann Friedrich Frauenholz (aka Jean Frederic Frauenholz) (1758–1822)
in Nuremberg.
Etching on laid paper with small margins
around the plate mark, backed with a support sheet.
Size: (sheet) 10.1 x 15.9 cm; (plate)
9.1 x 15 cm
Signed and dated in the plate at upper
right: “Dietricy 1744”.
State iii (of iii) with the Zingg
number, “45”, erased from the upper-left corner.
Linck 153-III (III) (JF Linck 1846,
“'Monographie der von C. W. E. Dietrich radierten, geschabten und in Holz
geschnittenen malerischen Vorstellungen”, Berlin, pp. 251–52, cat.nr. 153); see
also the description of this print held by the Rijksmuseum: http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.105713.
Condition: richly inked impression with
small margins and backed with a support sheet of archival (millennium quality)
washi paper. The upper left corner margin is restored otherwise the sheet is in
a good condition with minor signs of age toning and handling.
I am selling this small but exquisitely
rendered etching of the waterfalls and cascades at Tivoli (Italy) for the total
cost of AU$267 at the time of this
listing) including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are interested in purchasing this
remarkable nature study showing the effect of raking light on foliage, rocks
and water, please contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send
you a PayPal invoice to make the payment easy.
Dietricy was a bit of an artistic
chameleon in the sense that he had the gift to mimic other artists’ styles.
This ability, however, did not mean that his approach to image making was
rinsed clean of showing personal stylistic traits. For example, this very
beautiful nature study of the waterfalls and cascades at Tivoli is a fine
example of his very insightful and somewhat unique approach to portraying
spatial depth.
In one sense, Dietricy uses the traditional
approach for showing spatial depth by making the foreground waterfalls slightly
darker than those further away and employs an increasing amount of white space
around each line to suggest an even greater lightening of tone into the far
distance. There is, however, another device that Dietricy employs to portray
depth and this, I see, as being his personal stylistic hallmark: Dietricy uses
a transition from comparatively small, multi-directional cross-hatched strokes
to render forms in the foreground to parallel aligned strokes in the middle
distance and finally to almost horizontal strokes designed to portray distant
mountains and sky.
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