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Auction archive: Lot number 141

CAVALIERI, Giovanni Battista de (ca 1525-ca 1601) OPERA nela...

Estimate
US$6,000 - US$9,000
Price realised:
US$20,000
Auction archive: Lot number 141

CAVALIERI, Giovanni Battista de (ca 1525-ca 1601) OPERA nela...

Estimate
US$6,000 - US$9,000
Price realised:
US$20,000
Beschreibung:

CAVALIERI, Giovanni Battista de (ca 1525-ca 1601). OPERA nelaquale vie molti mostri de tutte le parti del mondo antichi et moderni con le dechiarationi a ciascheduno fine al presento anno 1585 . Rome: by the author, 1585.
CAVALIERI, Giovanni Battista de (ca 1525-ca 1601). OPERA nelaquale vie molti mostri de tutte le parti del mondo antichi et moderni con le dechiarationi a ciascheduno fine al presento anno 1585 . Rome: by the author, 1585. 4 o (280 x 211 mm). Engraved title and 18 etched plates. (Some pale marginal soiling.) Contemporary limp vellum (front joint cracked); blue cloth slipcase. Provenance : acquired from McCarron, 1990. Cavalieri, born at Lagherino and died at Rome, etched and engraved numerous series of prints after great Italian masters in a style that resembles that of Aeneas Vico. The present series copies Hans Burgkmair's woodcuts that would eventually appear in the supplement to Giovanni Botero's Delle relationi universali , Venice, 1617 and which would constitute "the first serious study of native life and dress made for publication in a European travel book" (Walter Oakeschott). Burgkmair's woodcuts very likely also formed part of a larger work by Burgkmair now lost. Both sets of woodcuts clearly were known in the first part of the 16th century, as evidenced by Cavalieri's copies and other books illustrated with cuts influenced by them (including those by Paré and Münster). No edition containing Burgkmair's original blocks is known before their 17th-century use in the supplement to Botero. The fantastical cuts of monsters which Cavalieri has reproduced in etching and engraving include figures from Egypt, Arabia and Ethiopia. One is of the skiapod of classical antiquity with an enormous foot which he uses to shade himself from the sun. The final three etchings are not after Burgkmair and the first two of these are presented in a variant style (without ruled borders enclosing the text): the first showing a set of Siamese twins from the town of Cingoli in 1584 and the second showing a man without legs, balanced on a table, from Rome, 1585. An exceedingly rare suite of prints, not recorded in any of the standard bibliographies.

Auction archive: Lot number 141
Auction:
Datum:
9 Apr 2013 - 10 Apr 2013
Auction house:
Christie's
9-10 April 2013, New York, Rockefeller Center
Beschreibung:

CAVALIERI, Giovanni Battista de (ca 1525-ca 1601). OPERA nelaquale vie molti mostri de tutte le parti del mondo antichi et moderni con le dechiarationi a ciascheduno fine al presento anno 1585 . Rome: by the author, 1585.
CAVALIERI, Giovanni Battista de (ca 1525-ca 1601). OPERA nelaquale vie molti mostri de tutte le parti del mondo antichi et moderni con le dechiarationi a ciascheduno fine al presento anno 1585 . Rome: by the author, 1585. 4 o (280 x 211 mm). Engraved title and 18 etched plates. (Some pale marginal soiling.) Contemporary limp vellum (front joint cracked); blue cloth slipcase. Provenance : acquired from McCarron, 1990. Cavalieri, born at Lagherino and died at Rome, etched and engraved numerous series of prints after great Italian masters in a style that resembles that of Aeneas Vico. The present series copies Hans Burgkmair's woodcuts that would eventually appear in the supplement to Giovanni Botero's Delle relationi universali , Venice, 1617 and which would constitute "the first serious study of native life and dress made for publication in a European travel book" (Walter Oakeschott). Burgkmair's woodcuts very likely also formed part of a larger work by Burgkmair now lost. Both sets of woodcuts clearly were known in the first part of the 16th century, as evidenced by Cavalieri's copies and other books illustrated with cuts influenced by them (including those by Paré and Münster). No edition containing Burgkmair's original blocks is known before their 17th-century use in the supplement to Botero. The fantastical cuts of monsters which Cavalieri has reproduced in etching and engraving include figures from Egypt, Arabia and Ethiopia. One is of the skiapod of classical antiquity with an enormous foot which he uses to shade himself from the sun. The final three etchings are not after Burgkmair and the first two of these are presented in a variant style (without ruled borders enclosing the text): the first showing a set of Siamese twins from the town of Cingoli in 1584 and the second showing a man without legs, balanced on a table, from Rome, 1585. An exceedingly rare suite of prints, not recorded in any of the standard bibliographies.

Auction archive: Lot number 141
Auction:
Datum:
9 Apr 2013 - 10 Apr 2013
Auction house:
Christie's
9-10 April 2013, New York, Rockefeller Center
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