Giovanni
Benedetto Castiglione (aka
Il Grechetto) (1609–1664)
“Head
of a Man with Turban and Fur Hat” (transl. Rijksmuseum title) (aka “Man with a
Long Beard, Wearing a Headdress and Fur Cap, Facing Right” [TIB title]), 1645–50,
from the series of six plates according to Bartsch (48–53), or five plates
according to Bellini (41-45), “Large Studies of Heads in Oriental Headdress”, printed
from the original plate and published in 1816 in London by John McCreery in the
album, “200 Etchings”.
Etching
on fine wove paper trimmed along the platemark (as published by McCreery) and backed
with a support sheet
Size:
(sheet) 11.5 x 8.6 cm; (plate) 11.2 x 8.2 cm.
Inscribed
on plate at upper right: “CASTILIONE”.
TIB
46 (21). 48 (32) (Paolo Bellini [ed.] 1982, “The Illustrated Bartsch: Italian
Masters of the Seventeenth Century”, vol 46, New York, Abaris Books, p. 51,
cat. no 48 [32]); Bellini 1982 41 (Paolo Bellini 1982, “L'Opera incisa di
Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione”, Milan, Comune di Milano, p. 133, cat. no. 41);
Bartsch XXI.32.48.
The
British Museum offers a description of this print and the following interesting
insight about the series in which it features:
“They
were originally etched with small landscapes along the short sides (a very
early remarque). …the landscapes were cut away and separately printed.”
See
also the following insight about the print series (and a description of this
print) offered by the Rijksmuseum:
(transl.)
“This series of heads with oriental headwear is inspired by similar etchings by
Rembrandt and Lievens.”
Condition:
well-printed impression with no sign of wear to the printing plate, trimmed
along the platemark (as published) in excellent condition (i.e. there are no
tears, holes, folds, abrasions, stains, foxing or signs of use) and laid upon
an archival support sheet of millennium quality washi paper.
I
am selling this superb etching by the artist argued to be the inventor of the
monotype for AU$387 (currently US$263.39/EUR238.05/GBP204.11 at the time of
this listing) 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 this near faultless (albeit late) impression by
one of the most important of the old masters, please contact me
(oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make
the payment easy.
For
those who love insights into the lives of the old masters, the following purported
“facts” about Castiglione may be fascinating:
1:
Castiglione invented the monotype process (i.e. “A single print taken from a
design created in oil paint or printing ink on glass or metal.” Oxford
Dictionary)
2:
Castiglione “discovered” Rembrandt and “is the first artist in Italy known to
have borrowed directly from the Dutch master” (Timothy J Standring & Martin
Clayton, 2013, “Castiglione: Lost Genius”, Royal Collection Trust, p. 43)
3:
He threw his sister off a rooftop. (Standring & Clayton, 2013)
4:
He accused his brother of being a thief and an assassin and sent him to jail.
(Standring & Clayton, 2013)
5:
He almost killed his nephew with relentless punches. (Standring & Clayton,
2013)
6:
Castiglione “pioneered the development of the oil sketch” (Wikipedia).
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