Jan
Luyken (aka
Jan Luiken) (1649–1712)
“Joseph
is Sold to Merchants on his Way to Egypt” (aka “Joseph
werd door syne broeders verkoft”; “Joseph est vendu
par ses Freres” [titles inscribed in Dutch and French on plate]; “Joseph
was Sold by his Brothers”), 1708, originally published by Pieter Mortier I (1661–1711) in 1708
in Amsterdam as
Plate 8 (illustration) to Gen: XXXVII. v. 27 in “Icones Biblicae Veteris et
Novi Testamenti” (Icons of Biblical Old and New Testament). This impression was
published in 1729 in Amsterdam, by Jan Covens (aka Johannes Covens)
(1697– 1774) and Corneille Mortier (aka Cornelis Mortier)
(fl.1688–1729).
Etching
on laid paper with small margins and centre-fold as published (see the original
margins shown on the copy of this print held by the Amsterdam Museum: https://data.collectienederland.nl/detail/foldout/void_edmrecord/dcn_amsterdam-museum_A-52532).
Size:
(sheet) 35.9 x 49.3 cm; (plate) 34.4 x 44.9 cm; (image borderline) 32.9 x 43.9
cm.
Lettered
on plate below the image borderline: (left) “Edit à J. Covens et C. Mortier.”;
(left of centre) “Joseph werd door syne broeders verkoft. Gen: XXXVII. v. 27”;
(right of centre) “Joseph est vendu par ses Freres. Gen:
XXXVII. v. 27”; (right) “Johannes Luyken Inv: et Fecit. / 8.”
State
ii (of ii) with the change of publisher from Pieter Mortier I to his son,
Corneille Mortier and Corneille’s brother-in-law, Jan Covens, and the erasure
of the privilege. Lifetime/early impression (based on the crisp quality of the
lines showing no sign of wear to the printing plate).
Van
Eeghen 3697 (Pieter van Eeghen & Johan Philip van der Kellen 1905, “Het
werk van Jan en Casper Luyken”, Amsterdam, Frederik Muller & Co., vol. 2,
p. 660, cat. no. 3697).
This publication is available for online viewing or free download at
archive.org (note that the page numbering is challenging and the URLs below are
helpful):
https://archive.org/details/gri_33125001866108/page/n485 (see
cat. no. 3697) and
https://archive.org/details/gri_33125001866108/page/n287 (see
plate 8).
Van
Eeghen (1905) offers the following description of this print:
(transl.)
“On the left near the pit are the sons of Jacob, more backward their
flocks. On the right the Midianite
merchants and their caravan.” (p. 660/287)
The
Rijksmuseum offers the following description of this print in its first state:
(transl.)
“Joseph's brothers sell him for twenty pieces of silver to passing Ishmaelite
merchants who take him to Egypt”
Condition:
richly inked and well-printed early impression, with small margins and flattened
centre-fold in near pristine condition (i.e. there are no tears, holes, losses,
abrasions, significant stains, foxing or signs of handling). The centre-fold verso still has flattened remnants of the glue that once
held the print in the book.
I
am selling this superb lifetime impression, for AU$230 (currently
US$158.12/EUR142.56/GBP121.50 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 magnificent etching executed with
extraordinary detail and with a grandness of vision that I envisage would have
impressed even Cecil B DeMille—the almost legendary film maker known for his
breathtakingly epic productions (1914–1958)—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
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