Jost
Amman (aka Jost Ammon) (1539–1591)
Double-sided woodcuts featuring on each side a military figure formatted
within an oval border of strapwork and figures,1563, published as illustrations
to Sigismund Feyrabend's (1528–90) and Simon Hüter's (fl.1560s), “Kriegsordnung”
(Warfare), 1563–64, Frankfurt am Main.
(left image/recto) “Schantzmeisters Besoldung” (Supervisor of fortifications
[?]), 1563.
(right image/verso) “Der Profosz der Arthollerey” (Provost/Chief
of Artillery), 1563.
Two woodcuts printed recto and verso on fine laid paper
re-margined with a window-cut support sheet.
Size: (sheet) 14.3 x 13.4 cm
Ref. recto woodcut: Andresen 226-46r (Andreas Andresen 1872–78, “Der
deutschen Peintre-Graveur oder die deutschen Maler als Kupferstecher, nach
ihrem Leben und ihren Werken, von dem letzten Drittel des 16. Jahrhunderts bis
zum Schluss des 18. Jahrhunderts”, Leipzig, dl. 1, pp. 360–70, cat.nr. 226).
Ref. verso woodcut: New Hollstein German (Amman book
illustrations) 1415; New Hollstein German (Amman book illustrations) 2707
See also the Rijksmuseum’s description of the recto woodcut (http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.47827)
and verso woodcut (http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.47842).
Condition: both impressions (recto and verso on the same sheet)
are well-inked and well-printed with little or no evidence of wear to the
plates (i.e. the prints are probably lifetime impressions or at least from an
early printing before the printing plates became worn). The sheet is in
excellent condition for its considerable age and has been re-margined with a
support sheet of archival (millennium quality) washi paper so that both sides
of the sheet can be examined without damaging the delicate paper.
I am selling these rare early/lifetime woodcut impressions from 1563
printed on both sides of the same sheet for [deleted] including postage and handling to anywhere
in the world (but not, of course, any import duties/taxes imposed by some
countries).
If you are interested in purchasing these woodcut illustrations of military figures by one of the most famous and productive printmakers of
the 16th century, please contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com)
and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make the payment easy.
This double-sided woodcut leaf has been sold
From my understanding of Amman’s practice as prolific printmaker,
his designs often served as illustrations for more than a single publication. Certainly
the ornamental borders surrounding the recto and verso oval images of military
men were separate plates and served to frame different prints. For example, the
Rijksmuseum’s copy of the recto woodcut (see http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.47827)
has a different border to the print shown here. Essentially the borders were interchangeable.
I have also found the same portrayed figures in other prints by this artist.
For example the portrayed figure in the verso woodcut is described in “Kriegsordnung”
(Warfare)—the text that this print illustrates—as “Der Profosz der Arthollerey”
(the Provost/Chief of Artillery) and yet the same figure wearing the same
costume is featured in the woodcut from another publication, “Panoplia” (Armour),
as “the Chief Artilleryman’s Lieutenant” (see TIB 8.119 [371]; Jane S
Peters [ed.] 1985, “The Illustrated Bartsch: German Masters of the Sixteenth
Century”, vol. 20 [Part 2], p. 697).
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