August Gaber (1823 –1891)
“Victorious Death” (aka “Sechstes Blatt”; “Sixth
Sheet: Death on Horseback Leaving the City as a Hero”), 1848, the sixth and
final plate from the series, “Auch ein Todtentanz” (aka “This, too, is a Dance
of Death”), showing scenes depicting the dance of death in the context of the
German Revolutions of 1848-49, after drawings by Alfred
Rethel (1816–1859) and following the intermediary design by Hugo
Leopold Friedrich Heinrich Bürkner (aka Hugo Leopold Friedrich
Heinrich Bürckner) (1818–1897), with verses by Robert Reinick (1805–1852),
published in Leipzig by Georg Wigand (1818–1858).
Wood engraving printed in black with a buff tonal plate on wove paper, backed with a support sheet.
Size: (support sheet) 67.8 x 51.8 cm; (sheet)
51.8 x 38.2 cm; (image borderline) 45.6 x 37 cm.
Lettered above the image borderline: “Sechstes
Blatt.”
Lettered within the image borderline: (lower
right) “GABER SC.”
Lettered below the image borderline in nine
columns of two lines: “Der sie geführt — es war der God! ... Der Held der
rothen Republik.”
Adriani 99 (Gert Adriani 1956, “Alfred Rethel:
Auch ein Totentanz: Todesdarstellungen von 1828 bis 1852”, Düsseldorf, p. 29,
cat.no. 99).
The Rijksmuseum offers the following
description of this print from the People's Edition of Augustus: (transl.) “Allegory
of the Revolution in the German Lands of 1848: ‘Ein Totentanz aus dem Jahre
1848’" (http://hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.48255).
See also the description of the folio of
engravings offered by the British Museum: https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/P_1977-U-11-1-6.
Condition: a strong and well-printed
impression laid upon an archival support sheet of millennium quality washi paper
providing wide margins. There is a restored/supported tear in the upper margin along with handling
marks, otherwise the sheet is in a very good condition with no significant
stains or foxing.
I am selling this large engraving which is the
final plate in a macabre series of prints presenting a nineteenth century twist
to the famous “Dance of Death” allegory—here the skeletal personification of
Death crowned with laurel leaves and holding a blank flag rides a horse that
has lurched forward to lick the blood from a fallen insurgent during the German
revolution of 1848/9—for the total cost of AU$224 (currently US$149.89/EUR150.19/GBP131.46
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 visually
arresting engraving, 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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