Allegory of a solar mirror - Leonardo da Vinci
Limited editions

Engraving Allegory of a solar mirror - Leonardo da Vinci

KM000193

The Comte de Caylus (1692-1765), grand nephew of Louis XIV, entered the Académie des lettres in 1714. Trained in drawing by Watteau and engraving by Mariette, he interpreted in etching the drawings from the Cabinet du Roy to which he had access. For the Chalcographie du Louvre, this represents a collection...

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Characteristics

Delivery
Order shipped directly from the Art Workshops within 3 weeks
Maintenance
Eviter toute source d'humidité et de lumière directe. Ne pas plier la feuille
Artists
Anne-Claude-Philippe de Caylus, Leonardo Da Vinci (1452-1519)
Art movement
Renaissance
Dimensions
33 x 25 cm
Printing Technique
Eau-forte
Theme
Made in France
Reference
KM000193
EAN
3336727314494
Matière de l'article
Hahnemühle paper
Editor
Ateliers d'art de la Rmn-GP
Conservation museum
Paris - Chalcographie du musée du Louvre

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The work and its artist

Anne-Claude-Philippe de Caylus

A sword man, little nephew of Louis XIV, Anne-Claude de Tubières, Count of Caylus, left the army in 1714 to enter the Academy of Letters; the same year he went to Italy. Friend of Watteau and Mariette, Caylus was an enlightened amateur of Italian painting from the Upper Renaissance (Roman and Venetian). The Count is responsible for an astonishing production in terms of the number of engravings made after the Italian masters, particularly after Piero Santi Bartoli's drawings. This prolific author left us, because in addition to being an engraver, he was a writer, he published various works: in 1730, in the Portraiture des dessins d'après les maîtres, he published the collection of Têtes de caractères engraved after Leonard de Vinci. In addition, he had Winckelmann's first essay on the excavations at Herculaneum translated and published (which he visited in person in 1715 and which would remain his obsession for nearly 30 years...). The reason why there are not many original prints of Caylus left can be explained by the following fact: the author, it seems, engraved his brass with etching, made a few prints and then polished the copper in order to use it again.