Triumphal arch for the archdukes of Austria
Reference: | S45102 |
Author | Pieter Van der Bortch |
Year: | 1599 ca. |
Measures: | 440 x 330 mm |
Reference: | S45102 |
Author | Pieter Van der Bortch |
Year: | 1599 ca. |
Measures: | 440 x 330 mm |
Description
Monumental 3-tiered arch with emblematic decoration, flanked by rows of flaming torches.
Etching and engraving, 1599 circa, lettered with title and "Cladis et/ Deus instar/ magne Philippe" within image; verso lettered with text pp. 213, 216. A fine impression, printed on contemporary laid paper, with margins, very good condition.
It depicts a triumphal arch erected in honor of Albert of Austria and Isabella of Spain. The work is one of the illustrations in one of the finest Flemish festival books, the Historica narratio profectionis et inagurationis serenissimorum belgii principum Alberti et Isabellae, Austriae Archiducum. Et eorum optatissimi in Belgium Adventus by Johannes Bochius, printed with imprint Ex Officina Plantiniana apud Joannem Moretum, Antuerpia, 1602.
The book describes and illustrates the festivities that took place in the cities of Brussels, Antwerp, Ghent and Valencia in honor of the arrival in 1599 of the archdukes of Austria, Prince Albert and his wife, Princess Isabella of Spain, daughter of Philip II, as regents of the Netherlands.
The extraordinary plates were executed in their entirety by Pieter van der Borcht (1545-1608), a pupil of Pieter Breughel, considered one of the great engravers of his time. The detailed illustrations in this work depict the triumphal arches, processions, fireworks, theaters and other ephemeral decorations that were erected in the respective cities as the retinue passed through. Particularly noteworthy is the detail with which the customs and habits of the inhabitants are illustrated and the architectural details of houses and other buildings, streets and public squares, especially in Antwerp.
According to Delén (1934, p. 97), Van der Borcht's prints represent the intermediate step between the Mannerist-style illustrations made by Pieter Coecke for the entry of Philip II and the fully Baroque ones by Rubens for the Cardenal Infante.
Bibliografia
Not in Hollstein; J. J. Delén, Le XVIe siècle. Les graveurs-illustrateurs. Paris: Les Èditions d'Art et d'Histoire, 1934, p. 97; Margit Thøfner, Marrying the City, Mothering the Country: Gender and Visual Conventions in Johannes Bochius's Account of the Joyous Entry of the Archduke Albert and the Infanta Isabella into Antwerp, in “Oxford Art Journal”, Vol. 22, No. 1 (1999), pp. 1-27; Praz, 23. Hiler, 95. Lipperheide, 2657. Graesse I, 458.
Pieter Van der Bortch (1535 circa - 1608)
Pieter or Peeter van der Borcht (c. 1535 Mecheln or Brussels – 1608 Antwerp) was a Flemish Renaissance painter, draughtsman and etcher. He is regarded as one of the most gifted botanical painters of the 16th century. Pieter van der Borcht the Elder also introduced new themes such as the 'monkey scene' (also called 'singerie') into Northern art. He was born in Mechelen, where there are indications that Pieter van der Borcht was the son of Jacques van der Borcht, an artist who was regarded in 1562 as the dean of the Mechelen Guild of Saint Luke. Pieter van der Borcht is recorded in 1564 as working from Mechelen for Christopher Plantin, who operated a famous book printing and publishing enterprise in Antwerp. He supplied Plantin with the drawings for the engravings for many scientific publications by Plantin such as the works of Rembert Dodoens, Carolus Clusius and Matthias de l'Obel. While van der Borcht was still living in Mechelen in 1572, the city, which had risen against the Spanish occupiers was retaken and sacked by Spanish troops under the Duke of Alva. The plundering of the city lasted for three days. Van der Borcht and his family were able to flee to Antwerp. Here Plantin gave them free lodgings in his own house. A letter of Plantin testifies to the fact that the departure from Mechelen of the van der Borcht family must have been very sudden, as on their arrival in Antwerp both parents were sick and their children naked. Van der Borcht did not leave Antwerp, where he became a full-time assistant of Plantin. He illustrated many liturgical books published by Plantin, mainly for the Spanish market. He probably became a member of the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1580 and was its dean from 1589 to 1592. Some art historians have questioned that the ‘Pieter Verborcht, painter’ who became a master in the Guild of Saint Luke in Antwerp in 1580 and served as its dean in 1591 and 1592 was the same as Pieter van der Borcht (I) since it was unlikely that a non-citizen would be allowed to hold this position in the Guild at that time. Pieter had a son also called Pieter van der Borcht, who became an artist. It is not clear whether he is one of the painters active under that name in Brussels. The first published work of art attributed to Pieter van der Borcht (I) was printed in 1552 by Jacob van Liesvelt's son Hans van Liesvelt II in a book written by Frans Vervoort entitled Dat vyants net, der booser wercken raet, visioenen ende met alder sijnder verholender stricken. The book contains 17 woodcut illustrations. The final illustration is an image of the Virgin Mary holding the symbol of the city of Mechelen and was signed "Fecit Petrus van der Boercht 1552". In 1564 Pieter van der Borcht made the drawings but not the woodcuts for an emblem book (the Emblemata of Sambucus) for Plantin. This was followed by a commission in 1565 to make 60 drawings of plants for a herbarium written by Rembert Dodoens, the Frumentorum, leguminum, palustrium et aquatilium herbarum historia. Both author and publisher were very happy with the quality of van der Borcht's drawings and he became the regular illustrator for Plantin's numerous botanical books. Van der Borcht made drawings for Clusius' Rariorum aliquot stirpium per Hispanias observatarum historia (1567) (one of the earliest books on Spanish flora), which were cut by Gerard van Kampen. The originals of these drawings are contained in the Libri picturati A. 16-31 held by the Jagiellonian Library of the Jagiellonian University in Kraków (originally in the former Preussischer Staatsbibliothek of Berlin). The 1.400 drawings are of very high quality. Van der Borcht made more than 3,180 botanical watercolours for Plantin. These drawings were the basis for woodcuts made by three of Plantin’s regular woodcutters known by name: Arnold Nicolaï, and later Gerard van Kampen and Cornelis Muller. Pieter van der Borcht later began to engrave his own work. He was one of the first to work in the new medium of copperplate engraving and etching that came into use after 1564. This medium finally replaced woodcuts in most of Plantin's publications. Pieter van der Borcht also designed a number of official printer's marks of Plantin.
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Pieter Van der Bortch (1535 circa - 1608)
Pieter or Peeter van der Borcht (c. 1535 Mecheln or Brussels – 1608 Antwerp) was a Flemish Renaissance painter, draughtsman and etcher. He is regarded as one of the most gifted botanical painters of the 16th century. Pieter van der Borcht the Elder also introduced new themes such as the 'monkey scene' (also called 'singerie') into Northern art. He was born in Mechelen, where there are indications that Pieter van der Borcht was the son of Jacques van der Borcht, an artist who was regarded in 1562 as the dean of the Mechelen Guild of Saint Luke. Pieter van der Borcht is recorded in 1564 as working from Mechelen for Christopher Plantin, who operated a famous book printing and publishing enterprise in Antwerp. He supplied Plantin with the drawings for the engravings for many scientific publications by Plantin such as the works of Rembert Dodoens, Carolus Clusius and Matthias de l'Obel. While van der Borcht was still living in Mechelen in 1572, the city, which had risen against the Spanish occupiers was retaken and sacked by Spanish troops under the Duke of Alva. The plundering of the city lasted for three days. Van der Borcht and his family were able to flee to Antwerp. Here Plantin gave them free lodgings in his own house. A letter of Plantin testifies to the fact that the departure from Mechelen of the van der Borcht family must have been very sudden, as on their arrival in Antwerp both parents were sick and their children naked. Van der Borcht did not leave Antwerp, where he became a full-time assistant of Plantin. He illustrated many liturgical books published by Plantin, mainly for the Spanish market. He probably became a member of the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1580 and was its dean from 1589 to 1592. Some art historians have questioned that the ‘Pieter Verborcht, painter’ who became a master in the Guild of Saint Luke in Antwerp in 1580 and served as its dean in 1591 and 1592 was the same as Pieter van der Borcht (I) since it was unlikely that a non-citizen would be allowed to hold this position in the Guild at that time. Pieter had a son also called Pieter van der Borcht, who became an artist. It is not clear whether he is one of the painters active under that name in Brussels. The first published work of art attributed to Pieter van der Borcht (I) was printed in 1552 by Jacob van Liesvelt's son Hans van Liesvelt II in a book written by Frans Vervoort entitled Dat vyants net, der booser wercken raet, visioenen ende met alder sijnder verholender stricken. The book contains 17 woodcut illustrations. The final illustration is an image of the Virgin Mary holding the symbol of the city of Mechelen and was signed "Fecit Petrus van der Boercht 1552". In 1564 Pieter van der Borcht made the drawings but not the woodcuts for an emblem book (the Emblemata of Sambucus) for Plantin. This was followed by a commission in 1565 to make 60 drawings of plants for a herbarium written by Rembert Dodoens, the Frumentorum, leguminum, palustrium et aquatilium herbarum historia. Both author and publisher were very happy with the quality of van der Borcht's drawings and he became the regular illustrator for Plantin's numerous botanical books. Van der Borcht made drawings for Clusius' Rariorum aliquot stirpium per Hispanias observatarum historia (1567) (one of the earliest books on Spanish flora), which were cut by Gerard van Kampen. The originals of these drawings are contained in the Libri picturati A. 16-31 held by the Jagiellonian Library of the Jagiellonian University in Kraków (originally in the former Preussischer Staatsbibliothek of Berlin). The 1.400 drawings are of very high quality. Van der Borcht made more than 3,180 botanical watercolours for Plantin. These drawings were the basis for woodcuts made by three of Plantin’s regular woodcutters known by name: Arnold Nicolaï, and later Gerard van Kampen and Cornelis Muller. Pieter van der Borcht later began to engrave his own work. He was one of the first to work in the new medium of copperplate engraving and etching that came into use after 1564. This medium finally replaced woodcuts in most of Plantin's publications. Pieter van der Borcht also designed a number of official printer's marks of Plantin.
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