Caligula
Reference: | S37959 |
Author | Joachim von SANDRART |
Year: | 1679 |
Measures: | 199 x 155 mm |
Reference: | S37959 |
Author | Joachim von SANDRART |
Year: | 1679 |
Measures: | 199 x 155 mm |
Description
Etching, 1679, not dated and signed.
Good example, printed on contemporary laid paper, with margings, in very good condition.
Portrait of Emperor Caligula (37-41 AD), from the monumental "Teutsche Academie der Bau-, Bild- und Mahlerey-Künste" (Deutsche Academy of Architecture - Sculpture – Painting). The first edition, in German, was published by Joachim von Sandrart in Nuremberg, in three volumes respectively in 1675, 1679 and 1680.
Joachim von SANDRART (Francoforte 1606 - Norimberga 1688)
German painter and treatises. Traveled extensively and was the most important German artist of the time but is remembered today almost exclusively for the "Teutsche Academie der Edlen Bau-Bild-und Mahlerey Künste" (German Academy of the noble arts of architecture, sculpture and painting) , published in Nuremberg in 1675-79 and followed by Latin edition in 1683. This treaty, organized into three main sections, is a source of great importance. The first part is an introduction to the art of architecture, painting and sculpture, mainly derived from earlier sources like Vasari and Van Mander. The second part, which contains biographies of artists, uses the same way as material from earlier sources, but also contains new material, especially on German artists and contemporary artists that the author knew personally (including Poussin and Lorrain). The third part contains information on art collections and a survey 'iconography, and finally there is also a chapter on the art of the Far East. Sandrart was the first director (1662) Academy of Nuremberg (the first in Germany).
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Joachim von SANDRART (Francoforte 1606 - Norimberga 1688)
German painter and treatises. Traveled extensively and was the most important German artist of the time but is remembered today almost exclusively for the "Teutsche Academie der Edlen Bau-Bild-und Mahlerey Künste" (German Academy of the noble arts of architecture, sculpture and painting) , published in Nuremberg in 1675-79 and followed by Latin edition in 1683. This treaty, organized into three main sections, is a source of great importance. The first part is an introduction to the art of architecture, painting and sculpture, mainly derived from earlier sources like Vasari and Van Mander. The second part, which contains biographies of artists, uses the same way as material from earlier sources, but also contains new material, especially on German artists and contemporary artists that the author knew personally (including Poussin and Lorrain). The third part contains information on art collections and a survey 'iconography, and finally there is also a chapter on the art of the Far East. Sandrart was the first director (1662) Academy of Nuremberg (the first in Germany).
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