Karel Dujardin (aka
Karel Du Jardin; Carel Dujardin; Carel du Jardin; Bokkebaart) (1626–1678)
“Landscape with Two Muleteers” (Les deux muletiers
[Bartsch title]), 1656, plate 20.
Etching on laid paper trimmed around the platemark
with a thread margin and hand-inscribed in ink verso ex-collection Naudet (fl.c1769–1810) (Naudet [Lugt 1937]) with
the date 179[0?]. Frits Lugt in “Les Marques de Collections de Dessins &
d’Estampes” (Fondation Custodia) offers the following information regarding
this collector:
(transl.) “NAUDET (circa 1800), printmaker, established
in the Louvre, Paris. […] Naudet is the printmaker who figures among the guests
of the “Meal given on March 7, 1806 by the Mds d'Estampes de Paris, to their
Confrère and their friend Le Clerc” (anonymous engraving of the time). He used
to sign on the back the beautiful prints that passed through his hands. We see
his signature accompanied by vintages varying from 1769 to 1810. He is probably
from the family of Joseph Naudet, who was professor, and director of the Royal
Library from 1840 to 1860 (http://www.marquesdecollections.fr/detail.cfm/marque/8618).
Size: (sheet) 14.9 x 17.9 cm; (image borderline) 14 x 17.7
cm.
State ii (of ii) with the addition of the plate number,
“20” on the lower right corner.
Inscribed on plate: (upper left corner) “K. DV.
IARDIN./ 1656 fe”; (lower right corner) “20”.
Hand-inscribed in brown ink verso: “Chez Naudet M[archand] & D[’]estampes au Louvre 1790[?]”.
TIB 1.204 (179) (Leonard J Slatkes [ed.] 1978, The
Illustrated Bartsch: Netherlandish Artists, vol. 1, New York, Abaris Books,
p. 190, cat. no. 204 [176]); Hollstein 20.II.
The British Museum offers the following description of
this print:
“Two Muleteers. Landscape with a man in central
foreground and driving two mules and some goats towards the right, a tree
growing slantwise from right to left in right foreground, an escarpment above a
river at centre with a second muleteer and two mules heading left, mountains
rise in the distance; second state with number. 1656” (https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/P_Sheepshanks-855).
See also a description of the first state of this
print offered by the Rijksmuseum: http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.38317.
Condition: a remarkably strong and near faultless impression,
trimmed with a thread margin. The sheet is in a near pristine condition with no
tears, holes, folds, abrasions, stains or foxing, but there is a hand-written collector’s
inscription in ink verso.
I am selling this superb impression with the
hand-written inscription verso that I understand was once in violet ink, but
has faded now to brown, testifying that this print was part of the
ex-collection of the famous art collector, publisher and dealer Naudet—see biographical
details offered by the British Museum: https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/term/BIOG39925—for
the total cost of AU$251 (currently US$192.86/EUR162/GBP139.56 at the time of
this listing) 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 visually arresting composition with its diagonally leaning tree in the foreground and a distant glimpse into rural life in the mid-1600s, 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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