Drawings That Look Like Prints
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Heindrick Goltzius, A Right Hand, pen and ink. Left: Teyler's Museum, Haarlem, 1588. Right: Private collection, about 1588 |
Drawings and prints tend to be conjoined in museum departments. Most people know that drawings are unique products of the artist's hand and can serve as preparatory studies for mass-produced woodcuts, engravings, etchings, or lithographs. A Getty loan show co-organized with the Art Institute of Chicago, "Lines of Connection: Drawing and Printmaking," demonstrates that the relationship between the media is not so pat. For one thing, drawings sometimes come after the related prints.
Novice art students were encouraged to copy Old Master prints, an easier exercise than drawing from a sculpture or live model. Centuries ago, Lucas van Leyden's engraved series were already so rare and expensive that collectors lacking a particular print would commission an artist to make a hand-drawn copy of the missing image. The fungible drawing would be displayed in lieu of the costly multiple.
Hendrick Goltzius, A Right Hand, 1588. Teylers Museum, Haarlem |
That brings us to an engaging subset of the show: drawings created as trompe l'oeil replicas of prints. Unlike a painting, a drawing hardly be hardly be confused for the "real thing" unless the real thing is a print. Creating a drawing that could be confused as a print was thus an ultimate test of draughtsmanship.
Famed as a virtuoso engraver, Hendrick Goltzius drew an iconic picture of his injured right hand, burned in a fire. The brush-and-ink drawing is made in the style of an engraving, something much more challenging than it may sound to someone who's never tried it. Rarely lent, the 1588 drawing (now in the Teylers Museum, Haarlem) is the show's centerpiece. Incredibly, it's accompanied by a near identical drawing, also autograph, from a private collection. The Teylers drawing alone has the inscription.
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Maurice Roger, Trompe L'oeil of a Tabletop with Dürer Prints and Printed Matter, pen and ink, opaque watercolor, and varnish, about 1740–60. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston |
The otherwise obscure 18th-century artist Maurice Roger did a Trompe L'oeil of a Tabletop with Dürer Prints and Printed Matter. Over 36 inches across, it's an amazing production mimicking Dürer prints (some reversed) and pages from books.
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Philipp Jacob Gütl and Caspar von Muralt, Allegorical Scene with the Infant Hercules Killing a Snake, pen and ink, 1747. Getty Research Institute |
Comments
--- J. Garcin
-Ted Gallagher NYC
https://philamuseum.org/collection/object/85733
Exhibition
A Masterpiece in Focus: Goltzius’s Without Ceres and Bacchus, Venus Would Freeze
November 16, 1991–February 2, 1992
This painting of great rarity and superb quality by Hendrick Goltzius is the most important old master work to enter the collections in the past two decades. In celebration of its coming to Philadelphia, the Museum has organized an ambitious and intensely focused international loan exhibition of works by Goltzius that relate to this remarkable painting and clarify its unique position in Northern Mannerist art. When Goltzius created this so-called "pen painting," which combines pen and ink and brush with oil color, it caused a sensation in Europe and was immediately purchased by Emperor Rudolf II for his collection in Prague. Without Ceres and Bacchus, Venus Would Freeze, c. 1600-1603, marks the critical moment when Goltzius, the most famous draftsman and printmaker in Europe, turned to large-scale painting. This exhibition unites the work with the only other known extent "pen-painting" of 1606 from the Hermitage in St. Petersburg, a renowned pen work on parchment of 1593 from the British Museum, and related works from museums in Malibu, New York, London, Oxford, Vienna, Haarlem, Rotterdam, Stockholm and Paris.
https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hendrick_Goltzius,_Dutch_(active_Haarlem)_-_Sine_Cerere_et_Libero_friget_Venus_(Without_Ceres_and_Bacchus,_Venus_Would_Freeze)_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
"The Sleeping Danaë Being Prepared for Jupiter"
Hendrick Goltzius (Northern Netherlands, 1558-1617)
1603
Oil on canvas
Canvas: 68 1/4 × 78 3/4 in. (173.36 × 200.03 cm)
Gift of The Ahmanson Foundation (M.84.191)
https://collections.lacma.org/node/249001