Jean Duvet (1485- circa 1570)
Jean Duvet (1485- circa 1570)

Saints Sebastian, Anthony, and Roch (B. 10; Bersier 48; Eisler 70)

细节
Jean Duvet (1485- circa 1570)
Saints Sebastian, Anthony, and Roch (B. 10; Bersier 48; Eisler 70)
engraving, 1550-1555, without watermark, a good impression of this rare print, with many vertical polishing scratches and with square sheet corners, with thread margins on three sides, trimmed slightly into the subject at left, some pale scattered foxing, otherwise in good condition
P. 246 x 162 mm., S. 248 x 164 mm.
来源
Friedrich August II, King of Saxony (1797-1854), Dresden (L. 971).
Kupferstichkabinett der Staatlichen Museen, Berlin (L. 1606), with their duplicate stamp (L. 2398).

拍品专文

This beautiful, unfinished plate is a rare example of a French Pestblatt, a broadside depicting a saint or saints venerated for their healing powers, and it was very likely made during an outbreak of the Plague in Burgundy in 1554. It displays a strong Italianate influence, with the finely modeled figure of Saint Sebastian in particular being directly inspired by Mantegna's engraving of The Risen Christ between Saint Andrew and Saint Longinus (B. 6). However, Duvet's treatment is characteristically idiosyncratic. The perspective is distorted and flattened, and the saints, angels, animals, and tree are dynamically connected by flowing robes, wings, limbs and fur - all animated by the sketch-like quality of Duvet's line.

It can be assumed that Duvet's plates were printed in small numbers only - certainly few survive to this day. The present work is thought to have been printed in two editions, with and without text. The only known impression with text was destroyed in Dresden in World War II. Eisler records fifteen impressions without text in public collections.