Robert Nanteuil (aka Robert Nantueil) (1623–1678)
“Marie
Jeanne Baptiste de Savoie-Nemours”, 1678, after Laurent du Sour (fl.1678),
engraved for “Theatrum statuum regiae Celsitudinis Sabaudiae principis Regis” (Amsterdam,
Blaeu, 1682).
Engraving on laid paper
with restorations backed with a support sheet.
Size: (sheet) 43.2 x
29.4 cm; (soft plate approx. only) 39.5 x 25.8 cm; (image borderline) 38.8. x
24.8 cm.
Inscribed on plate with
entwined initials at upper left and right corners and coat of arms below the
portrait.
State ii? (of iii)
Lettered on plate
within the image borderline on pedestal: (left) “Laurent du Sour pinx[it]”;
(centre) “Marie Jeanne Baptiste de Sauoye/ Duchesse de Sauoye, Princesse de
Piemont, Reyne de/ Chypre &c, Tutrice, et Regente &c/ pendant la Minorité
de Son Fils.”; (right) “R. Nanteüil Sculp. 1678.”
Petitjean & Wickert
348.205 (Ch. Petitjean & Ch. Wickert 1925, “Catalogue de l'oeuvre gravé de
Robert Nanteuil”, Paris); Adamczak 257–58.256
The British Museum and
the Metropolitan Museum of Art offer description of this print:
https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/P_1864-1114-517;
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/428745.
Condition: many
restorations (see before and after photographs) and fractures to the margin.
The sheet has been laid onto a support of archival (millennium quality)
washi paper.
I am selling this very
rare, large and important etching for AU$296 (currently US$210.99/EUR180.06/GBP164.13
at the time of posting this print) including Express Mail (EMS) 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 engraving (despite its restorations) 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
RESTORATION PROCESS:
1. The print is soaked
in clean water for several days in the sun. No bleach or other chemicals are
added and the “cleaning” is all achieved by the heat of the sun and UV.
2. Glue is prepared
using (if one were to follow my method): 2 heaped soup-spoons of rice flour
starch with an 18 cm squirt of Japanese archival glue (see photo) and blended in 500 ml of cold distilled
water.
3. The print is removed from the water and placed
image down onto a sheet of cellophane. The prepared glue is then brushed carefully
over the back of the sheet that is now supported by cellophane.
4. A support sheet of
archival paper (I use a Chinese paper of the highest quality) that is larger
than the print is placed onto a clean acrylic sheet and the archival paper is then brushed
with the prepared glue until it is thoroughly soaked—ensuring that there are no
air bubbles or creases.
5. Lifting the print
using the cellophane backing, turn the print upside down with the cellophane
still attached and position the print onto the still-wet-with-glue support
sheet. Use a firm pressure applied to the back of the cellophane to laminate
the print to the support sheet (I use a traditional gluing brush for this
procedure).
6. Peel back the
cellophane and mop up the residual glue using blotting/tissue paper.
7. Leave the support
sheet attached by the residue glue on the acrylic sheet until it is thoroughly
dry—about a week—and make any replenishment infilling (if required) using artist’s
quality watercolour. Note that I needed to edit out a train of brown stains using
W&N Titanium white blended to the colour and tone of the laid paper.
8. When the sheet is
dry, remove it from the acrylic base using a palette knife.