Statua del Gran Pompeo...

Reference: A54121
Author Robert van AUDENAERDE
Year: 1704 ca.
Printed: Rome
Measures: 215 x 345 mm
€150.00

Reference: A54121
Author Robert van AUDENAERDE
Year: 1704 ca.
Printed: Rome
Measures: 215 x 345 mm
€150.00

Description

Etching, printed on contemporary laid paper, with margins, in perfect condition.

Plate taken from the famous Raccolta di statue antiche e moderne: data in luce sotto i gloriosi auspicj della ... Papa Clemente XI. / da Domenico de Rossi; illustrata colle sposizioni a ciascheduna immagine di Pavolo Alessandro Maffei. In Roma nella Stamperia alla Pace con Privilegio del Sommo Pont. e licenza dè Superiori l'anno MDCCIV.

In 1704, the largest collection ever assembled of prints depicting ancient Roman statues was published in Rome, a work that would remain a milestone in the genre. Compared to its most important predecessor, the Segmenta nobilium signorium et statuarum by the French painter and engraver François Perrier (1638), the Raccolta, published by Domenico De Rossi, with an erudite commentary by Paolo Alessandro Maffei (1653-1716), was distinguished above all by the presence, alongside the Nobilia Opera, of famous modern sculptures from the 16th and 17th centuries, preserved both in Rome and Florence.

The engravers who worked on the copper engravings were almost all French, and the undertaking was considered a collective effort led primarily by the publisher, the most important in Baroque Rome. Not all the names involved, however, were of the same caliber and prestige, and above all, they were not all active in the same years: two of the lesser-known engravers, Claude Randon (died 1679) and François Andriot (d. 1704), had worked together, on behalf of Charles Errand, director of the Académie de France à Rome, on Giovanni Pietro Bellori's Vite de' pittori, scultori e architetti moderni, published in Rome in 1672. The involvement of these two engravers suggests that the Raccolta arose from an undertaking started, but then abandoned, in the 1670s by Charles Errard, with the collaboration, presumably, of Bellori himself.

Among the artists who worked for the De Rossi printing house for this luxurious repertoire of statuary, the name of François de Poilly also appears (six plates), who, unlike Andriot and Randon, was a highly successful and extraordinarily prolific engraver who died in Paris in 1693. Randon and Poilly, therefore, had certainly been dead for some time when Domenico De Rossi published the Raccolta, and it is possible that Andriot had also already died, or was no longer in Rome. Among the other engravers whose signatures appear on the plates of the Raccolta, are some of the protagonists of the printmaking active in Rome at the beginning of the century: Francesco Aquila (fifty-two plates), Nicolas Dorigny (thirty-one plates), the Flemish Robert van Audenaerde (1663-1743; twenty-four plates) and Giovanni Girolamo Frezza (1671-post 1748; two plates).

Bibliografia

Stefano Pierguidi, La Raccolta di statue antiche e moderne della calcografia De Rossi e un'impresa incompiuta di Charles Errard, in “Les cahiers d'histoire de l'art” 14, pp. 106-113.

Robert van AUDENAERDE (Gand 1663 - Roma 1743)

Robert van Audenaerde or Ouden-Aerd (1663–1748) was a Flemish painter and engraver. He was born at Ghent, and was first a scholar of Francis van Mierhop, but he afterwards studied under Hans van Cleef. When he was twenty-two years of age he went to Rome, where he became a disciple of Carlo Maratti. Under this master he became a good painter of historical subjects. He amused himself with the point in his leisure moments, and some of his plates were shown to Carlo Maratti, who recommended him to devote himself entirely to the art of engraving. He, however, painted several pictures for the churches of his native city, to which he returned after an absence, it is said, of thirty-seven years. He died at Ghent in 1748. His best work is the altar-piece of the high altar in the church of the Carthusians at Ghent, representing 'St. Peter appearing to a group of Monks of that order'. In the church of St. James is a picture by him of 'St. Catharine refusing to worship the False Gods'. Several other works by this master are in the churches and convents of his native city, all of which are painted in the style of Maratti.

Robert van AUDENAERDE (Gand 1663 - Roma 1743)

Robert van Audenaerde or Ouden-Aerd (1663–1748) was a Flemish painter and engraver. He was born at Ghent, and was first a scholar of Francis van Mierhop, but he afterwards studied under Hans van Cleef. When he was twenty-two years of age he went to Rome, where he became a disciple of Carlo Maratti. Under this master he became a good painter of historical subjects. He amused himself with the point in his leisure moments, and some of his plates were shown to Carlo Maratti, who recommended him to devote himself entirely to the art of engraving. He, however, painted several pictures for the churches of his native city, to which he returned after an absence, it is said, of thirty-seven years. He died at Ghent in 1748. His best work is the altar-piece of the high altar in the church of the Carthusians at Ghent, representing 'St. Peter appearing to a group of Monks of that order'. In the church of St. James is a picture by him of 'St. Catharine refusing to worship the False Gods'. Several other works by this master are in the churches and convents of his native city, all of which are painted in the style of Maratti.