Segna
Reference: | S39348 |
Author | Francesco VALEGIO |
Year: | 1616 ca. |
Zone: | Senj |
Printed: | Venice |
Measures: | 420 x 310 mm |
Reference: | S39348 |
Author | Francesco VALEGIO |
Year: | 1616 ca. |
Zone: | Senj |
Printed: | Venice |
Measures: | 420 x 310 mm |
Description
Etching and engraving, 1616, signed in plate at lower right Franc.co Valegio forma.
Exemple of the second state, with the imprint Stefano Scolari forma in Venetia a S. Zulian.
Perspective plan of the fortified city of Senja (Senj), located on the Croatian coast between Rijeka and Zadar. Overlooking the city is the fortress of Nehaj, which is located south of the Port, outside the walls. It was built in 1558 when Venice and the Turks were at the height of their power and is 18m high and 23m wide.
In the dedication to the Venetian senator Antonio Bragadin, in the scroll at the top center, Valegio states that he used a drawing by Zaccaria dal Pozzo, a doctor from Feltre who died at the age of 102 in 1561. It is likely that the drawing did not contain the fortress - present instead in the engraving - which was built only in 1558.
Francesco Valegio (Valesio or Valeggio), born in Verona to a family originally from Valeggio sul Mincio (Verona). Defined a true "entrepreneur of the image": painter, draftsman, engraver, printer, publisher and, in Venice, also seller of prints (workshop in Spadaria, at the Segno della Sorte), he produced many works, portraits, historical and religious subjects, including devotional prints and illustrations for books and numerous maps.
Stefano Mozzi Scolari, engraver and publisher from Brescia, was active in Venice from 1644 to 1687. His workshop was one of the best Venetian chalcography of the '600. He practiced the art of printing and trading maps in S. Zulian at the sign of the Three Virtues. He used the plates of Bertelli, Valegio and Van Aelst, also taking care of the reprinting of very important maps such as Gastaldi's Lombardia, and the maps of Italy by Greuter and Magini.
The work is extremely rare. One example is known in the former collection of Franco Novacco; another one is described by Marinelli in the collection of the Museo Civico Correr.
Magnificent proof, printed on contemporary laid paper, with margins, in perfect condition.
Bibliography
Marinelli, Saggio di cartografia veneta, n. 685.
Literature
Marinelli, Saggio di cartografia veneta, n. 685.
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Francesco VALEGIO (1570 ca. – 1643 ca.)
Francesco Valegio engraver and printer, active between 1570 and 1643 ca According to Gori Gambellini, was born in Bologna in 1560, while the Salsa, taking up the study of Zari, validating the source of Verona, including as regards the date of his death, apparently took place in Verona around 1641 to 1643 approximately (U. Thieme - Becker F.). His activity as an engraver and printer took place mainly in Venice, often in collaboration with other printers including Dorino Catarino (or Doino) with which reissued the map of Venice by Franco in 1574 and a plant in Vicenza in 1611. It should also be reminded of a paper of the Duchy of Savoy, first published by Ferrante Bertelli in 1562, the date was later revised edition in 1600 and with execudit Donato Rasicotti and Francesco Valegio.
With the example of this and other prints, including maps, the Almagia Valegio claimed that he had released a large number of fakes and reproductions of works by other engravers.
The most challenging part of the cartographic work Valegio is the "Collection of the most illustrious et famous cities around the world," the tables in the corpus are not dated, with the exception of Algiers, Constantinople and Rhodes signed by Martino Rota Sibenik, where it appears the year 1572. The plants and views that have the signature of the Rota are the oldest part of the collection and are likely to conclude that the editorial project has been started dall'incisore the early '70s of the sixteenth century and left unfinished in 1573 as a result of its Transfer to Vienna as court portraitist. The presence of such cards has led to the work dating to 1579. However, a date well in advance referring to the entire collection, it would seem highly unlikely in that it goes counter to the biographical data of Valegio (on that date would have been little more than 15 years) wanted to pursue the study of the Salsa and also many of the images are influenced by models in the first volumes of figurative Civitates Orbis Terrarum by Georg Braun and Frans Hogenberg, published between 1572 and 1588.
Throughout the collection of engravings, namely 112, bear the signature or initials of Valegio, which without any doubt can be attributed to the authorship of the entire work. The expansion of the number of images, from 270 to 322, the net change of the hand and artistic quality of the engraving, the sizes of the specimens, leading to think that the volume has had a long gestation and articulate. Copies present in Rome, Florence and London are composed of a variable number of boards 234 and 250 and contain all three units of the 112 cards signed by Valegio. The images are part of these collections are the oldest part of the Collection for which it is engraved with the famous title page. In the years that followed were recorded by a completely different hand, much more coarse and imprecise, 69 maps and views that differ from the previous series for a different layout, all bearing a white stripe at the bottom (18 mm), in which often, but not always appear in titles or descriptions of the cities represented in the image. Copies of these characteristics are those preserved in Venice, Florence and Washington.
In difficult times to be specified with a date, but certainly to be placed first edition edited by Rasicotti the Valegio in circulation a new cover, entitled Collection Dile most famous cities of Italy, this time addressed to the local market, in many collection only collects the views of Italian cities. 'S full copy of all images is sold later by the publisher of Venetian origin Rasciotti Donato, publisher of other maps of cities in the late sixteenth century. A plan of 1599, representing Brescia, calls himself "Donald Rasciotti in Venetia to the bridge of Barettari" while in the theater of the most illustrious et famous cities in the world has the address "A Bridge To Venetia Bare.ri"
The original branches of Velegio Francis had a long life and find them printed again in 1713, Savonarola in the work of Raphael (also known as Alfonsus LaSor Varea A, 1680 -1748) Universus Terrarum Orbis.
The Valegio represents a very significant figure in the horizon editorial copperplate of Venice at the turn of the century. According to the sauce, the criticism has been strongly oriented to a purely aesthetic assessment, which has long neglected "the multifarious activities of this interesting and eclectic set of copperplate engraver and publisher.
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Literature
Marinelli, Saggio di cartografia veneta, n. 685.
|
Francesco VALEGIO (1570 ca. – 1643 ca.)
Francesco Valegio engraver and printer, active between 1570 and 1643 ca According to Gori Gambellini, was born in Bologna in 1560, while the Salsa, taking up the study of Zari, validating the source of Verona, including as regards the date of his death, apparently took place in Verona around 1641 to 1643 approximately (U. Thieme - Becker F.). His activity as an engraver and printer took place mainly in Venice, often in collaboration with other printers including Dorino Catarino (or Doino) with which reissued the map of Venice by Franco in 1574 and a plant in Vicenza in 1611. It should also be reminded of a paper of the Duchy of Savoy, first published by Ferrante Bertelli in 1562, the date was later revised edition in 1600 and with execudit Donato Rasicotti and Francesco Valegio.
With the example of this and other prints, including maps, the Almagia Valegio claimed that he had released a large number of fakes and reproductions of works by other engravers.
The most challenging part of the cartographic work Valegio is the "Collection of the most illustrious et famous cities around the world," the tables in the corpus are not dated, with the exception of Algiers, Constantinople and Rhodes signed by Martino Rota Sibenik, where it appears the year 1572. The plants and views that have the signature of the Rota are the oldest part of the collection and are likely to conclude that the editorial project has been started dall'incisore the early '70s of the sixteenth century and left unfinished in 1573 as a result of its Transfer to Vienna as court portraitist. The presence of such cards has led to the work dating to 1579. However, a date well in advance referring to the entire collection, it would seem highly unlikely in that it goes counter to the biographical data of Valegio (on that date would have been little more than 15 years) wanted to pursue the study of the Salsa and also many of the images are influenced by models in the first volumes of figurative Civitates Orbis Terrarum by Georg Braun and Frans Hogenberg, published between 1572 and 1588.
Throughout the collection of engravings, namely 112, bear the signature or initials of Valegio, which without any doubt can be attributed to the authorship of the entire work. The expansion of the number of images, from 270 to 322, the net change of the hand and artistic quality of the engraving, the sizes of the specimens, leading to think that the volume has had a long gestation and articulate. Copies present in Rome, Florence and London are composed of a variable number of boards 234 and 250 and contain all three units of the 112 cards signed by Valegio. The images are part of these collections are the oldest part of the Collection for which it is engraved with the famous title page. In the years that followed were recorded by a completely different hand, much more coarse and imprecise, 69 maps and views that differ from the previous series for a different layout, all bearing a white stripe at the bottom (18 mm), in which often, but not always appear in titles or descriptions of the cities represented in the image. Copies of these characteristics are those preserved in Venice, Florence and Washington.
In difficult times to be specified with a date, but certainly to be placed first edition edited by Rasicotti the Valegio in circulation a new cover, entitled Collection Dile most famous cities of Italy, this time addressed to the local market, in many collection only collects the views of Italian cities. 'S full copy of all images is sold later by the publisher of Venetian origin Rasciotti Donato, publisher of other maps of cities in the late sixteenth century. A plan of 1599, representing Brescia, calls himself "Donald Rasciotti in Venetia to the bridge of Barettari" while in the theater of the most illustrious et famous cities in the world has the address "A Bridge To Venetia Bare.ri"
The original branches of Velegio Francis had a long life and find them printed again in 1713, Savonarola in the work of Raphael (also known as Alfonsus LaSor Varea A, 1680 -1748) Universus Terrarum Orbis.
The Valegio represents a very significant figure in the horizon editorial copperplate of Venice at the turn of the century. According to the sauce, the criticism has been strongly oriented to a purely aesthetic assessment, which has long neglected "the multifarious activities of this interesting and eclectic set of copperplate engraver and publisher.
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