La Maison de Ville a Milan

Reference: S37826
Author Georg Balthasar PROBST
Year: 1760 ca.
Zone: Milano
Printed: Augsburg
Measures: - x - mm
€800.00

Reference: S37826
Author Georg Balthasar PROBST
Year: 1760 ca.
Zone: Milano
Printed: Augsburg
Measures: - x - mm
€800.00

Description

Pair of views of Probst of Piazza dei Mercanti and Palazzo Ducale, the current Palazzo Reale, in Milan.

Original engravings executed in etching on copper matrix, with coeval coloring.

Under the figurative part, title in Latin, French, Italian and German; on the right the name of the engraver, at the top right corner the table number, 135 and 136.

Both views are magnificently animated by characters and carriages.

The sheets were printed in Augsburg. G. B. Probst was one of the major landscape-view printers in Europe.


Two sheets of 430x315 cm.

Georg Balthasar PROBST (1732-1801)

Georg Balthasar Probst was a German artist, engraver and publisher in Augsburg, a major European publishing center in the 17th and 18th centuries. He produced architectural views of places around the world intended as vues d’optiques, which were published in various places during the last half of the 18th century, including Paris, Augsburg and London. He was also known for his portraits. Probst came from an extended family of printers, whose businesses can all be traced back to the publishing firm of Jeremias Wolff (1663-1724). After Wolff's death his firm was continued as “Wolff’s Heirs” (Haeres Jer. Wolffii) by his son-in-law Johann Balthasar Probst (1689-1750). After Probst’s death in 1750, his descendants divided the business and published under their own imprints: Johann Friedrich Probst (1721-1781), Georg Balthasar Probst (1732-1801) and Johann Michael Probst. Another part of the Wolff-Probst firm was acquired by the Augsburg publisher Johann Georg Hertel (1700-1775), whose son Georg Leopold Hertel had married a sister of the Probsts. In the next generation, Georg Mathäus Probst (d. 1788), son of Georg Balthasar Probst, also became an engraver of portraits and views.

Georg Balthasar PROBST (1732-1801)

Georg Balthasar Probst was a German artist, engraver and publisher in Augsburg, a major European publishing center in the 17th and 18th centuries. He produced architectural views of places around the world intended as vues d’optiques, which were published in various places during the last half of the 18th century, including Paris, Augsburg and London. He was also known for his portraits. Probst came from an extended family of printers, whose businesses can all be traced back to the publishing firm of Jeremias Wolff (1663-1724). After Wolff's death his firm was continued as “Wolff’s Heirs” (Haeres Jer. Wolffii) by his son-in-law Johann Balthasar Probst (1689-1750). After Probst’s death in 1750, his descendants divided the business and published under their own imprints: Johann Friedrich Probst (1721-1781), Georg Balthasar Probst (1732-1801) and Johann Michael Probst. Another part of the Wolff-Probst firm was acquired by the Augsburg publisher Johann Georg Hertel (1700-1775), whose son Georg Leopold Hertel had married a sister of the Probsts. In the next generation, Georg Mathäus Probst (d. 1788), son of Georg Balthasar Probst, also became an engraver of portraits and views.