Sunday, September 17, 2017

Hand-colored Prints - 17th century

Johannes Teyler
Cockerel - from Opus Typochromaticum
ca. 1688-1700
engraving printed à la poupée, with additional hand-coloring
British Museum

Johannes Teyler
Ceres - from Opus Typochromaticum
ca. 1688-1700
engraving printed à  la poupée, with additional hand-coloring
British Museum

Johannes Teyler
Helmeted horsemen bathing in a stream, after Rubens
ca. 1688-1700
engraving printed à la poupée, with additional hand-coloring
British Museum

"À la poupée (literally 'with the doll') describes a method of inking intaglio prints in which two or more inks of different colors are selectively applied to different parts of a single copperplate.  The inked plate is then printed in a single pass through the press.  The method takes its name from the poupée (doll), the small-ball-shaped wad of fabric that is used to ink the plate."

 from an excellent glossary of early color-printing techniques put together by the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC for the exhibition Colorful Impressions 


Gérard de Lairesse
Title page for Atlas Minor
with allegorical figures of the Earth and of Atlas holding the Heavens
published by Nicolaes Visscher in Amsterdam
1670
etching, hand-colored
British Museum

Crispijn de Passe the Elder after Jan Brueghel the Elder
Landscape
ca. 1600
engraving, hand-colored
British Museum

Anonymous French printmaker
Queen Christina of Sweden received at Paris by prelates and courtiers
after 1656
engraving
British Museum

Anonymous German printmaker
Portrait of Anne of Cleves
ca. 1552-1632
woodcut, hand-colored
British Museum

Anonymous Italian printmaker
Portrait of Cardinal Tolomeo Galli 
with Pope Pius IV in roundel
ca. 1591-1600
woodcut with stencil-work
British Museum

"This [above] is an intriguing woodcut image: it is made up of a tabernacle frame, a separate portrait of the Cardinal and, in the oval above, a separate portrait of the Pope who created him.  The inscription is printed in letterpress.  A stencil has been used to color the capes and caps of both Cardinal and Pope with red.  The structure implies the intention to make a series of portraits of Cardinals in precisely this form.  It is a method of presentation that would also easily accommodate changes being made to the title of Cardinals when they were translated."

– from The Print in Italy, 1550-1620 by Michael Bury (British Museum, 2001)

Giovanni Battista Vanni after Correggio
Apostle with four Angels
from the Vision of St John on Patmos fresco in the cupola of the Duomo at Parma
counterproof of etching, hand-colored
1642
British Museum

Giovanni Battista Vanni after Correggio
Two Apostles with three Angels
from the Vision of St John on Patmos fresco in the cupola of the Duomo at Parma
counterproof of etching, hand-colored
1642
British Museum

Giovanni Battista Vanni after Correggio
Two Apostles with four Angels
from the Vision of St John on Patmos fresco in the cupola of the Duomo at Parma
counterproof of etching, hand-colored
1642
British Museum

Giovanni Battista Vanni after Correggio
Apostle with three Angels
from the Vision of St John on Patmos fresco in the cupola of the Duomo at Parma
counterproof of etching, hand-colored
1642
British Museum

Giovanni Battista Vanni after Correggio
Apostle with four Angels
from the Vision of St John on Patmos fresco in the cupola of the Duomo at Parma
counterproof of etching, hand-colored
1642
British Museum

"Of these foreshortenings the moderns have given us some examples which are to the point and difficult enough, as for instance in a vault the figures which look upwards, are foreshortened and retire.  We call these foreshortenings 'al di sotto in sù' (in the 'up from below' style) and they have such force that they pierce the vaults.  These cannot be executed without study from the life, or from models at suitable heights, else the attitudes and movements of such things cannot be caught.  And certainly the difficulty of this kind of work calls forth the highest grace as well as great beauty, and results in something stupendous in art.  You find, in the Lives of our Artists, that they have given very great salience to works of this kind, and laboured to complete them perfectly, whence they have obtained great praise.  The foreshortenings from beneath upwards (di sotto in sù) are so named, because the object represented is elevated and looked at by the eye raised upwards, and is not on the level line of the horizon: wherefore because one must raise the head in the wish to see them, and perceives first the soles of the feet and the other lower parts we find the said name justly chosen.  (Correggio is responsible for many of the forced effects of drawing in the decorative painting of vaults and ceilings in later times . . .)

– from Vasari on Technique, translated by Louisa S. Maclehose, edited by Gerard Baldwin Brown (London: J.M. Dent, 1907)

Giuseppe Maria Mitelli
Tarot cards, Bologna
17th century
etchings, hand-colored
British Museum

"Carefully coloured pack of the well known cards designed and etched by Mitelli for the Bentivoglio family.  The subjects are all fancifully and artistically treated."

– curator's notes from the British Museum