Wednesday, 11 November 2015

The Rysbrack Statuettes of Rubens, van Dyck and du Quesnoy, Part 11. The Terracotta bust of Francois du Quesnoy.

 
The Life Size Terracotta bust of Francois du Quesnoy
By Michael Rysbrack,
Signed and dated Mich. Rysbrack. 1743.
61.5 x 51.3 cms.
 
now in the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Canada.
 
 
 
Photograph of the Terracotta bust of Il Fiammingo - Francois du Quesnoy
by Michael Rysbrack -
photograph from Michael Rysbrack by M. Webb.
pub. Country Life 1954.
With London art dealer Gerald Kerin of Mount Street
(ceased business 1970), now at the Royal Art Gallery, Toronto, Canada.
 
_____________________________________________
 
Reproduced below are scans from the Burlington Magazine October 1963
 
 
 
 
 
 


 
 
From the files of the Royal Ontario Museums, Toronto.
 
I have requested good photographs from them and hopefully will receive and be able to post them in due course.
 


Francois du Quesnoy
Gaspar van der Hagen
Ivory relief.
Signed lower left: "G.VDR"
15 x 10cms.
Yale Centre for British Art.

The Rysbrack Statuettes of Rubens, van Dyck and du Quesnoy, Part 10. The Terracotta bust of Rubens.

The Terra cotta Bust of Peter Paul Rubens
by Michael Rysbrack 1743.
 
 
The Terracotta bust of Peter Paul Rubens by John Michael Rysbrack.
now with the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia.
Sold at Christie’s, London, Lot 17, 2 June,1961,
It is almost certainly the bust of Rubens sold as lot 44 - “Models in Terracotta”
Rysbrack sale 26 April 1765.
Signed and dated 1743.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
Photograph of the terracotta of Rubens by Rysbrack 
 with the Heim Gallery, Jermyn St, London
no longer in business.
circa 1963.
 
 
Another photograph of the terracotta bust of Rubens 
Scanned from the article in the Burlington Magazine of October, 1963.

The Rysbrack Statuettes of Rubens, van Dyck and du Quesnoy, Part 9. The Terracotta bust of van Dyck.

 

A Terracotta Bust of Anthony van Dyck
by Michael Rysbrack.


This photograph scanned from Michael Rysbrack by Marjorie Webb, Country Life, 1954.
  


 
 

 
 
Life Size Terracotta Bust of Sir Anthony van Dyck
Perhaps with a bust of Rubens - lot 44 - “Models in Terracotta” Rysbrack sale 26 April 1765.
Signed and dated 1743.
These images courtesy and Copyright: © Courtauld Institute of Art.
 
This bust is at Althorp, Northamptonshire, England. The home of Earl Spencer.
 
I contacted them several times earlier this year asking for photographs or failing that permission to visit and photograph the bust myself but they insist that I either pay them £240 to employ a photographer or they could (possibly) supply me with an (in their words)  not very good quality photograph for £30. Both offers I was able to politely refuse.

Tuesday, 10 November 2015

The Rysbrack Statuettes of Rubens, van Dyck and du Quesnoy, Part 8. Engraved sources du Quesnoy.

Some sources for the bust and Statuette by Michael Rysbrack 
of Francois du Quesnoy - called il Fiammingo (1594 - 1643).
 
 
Francois du Quesnoy called Francesco Fiamingo
anonymous.
Oil on Canvas
 49.7 x 65 cm.
Accademia di San Luca, Rome
 
This the probable source of the following engravings.
 
 
 
 
 
Engraving from Teutsche Academie der Bau-, Bild- und Mahlerey-Künste 
Joachim von Sandrart, Nürnberg
1675 / 1679 / 1680

 

 
Francois Du Quesnoy.

Engraving by Claude Randon, 1660 - 80,
155mm x 116 mm,
British Museum
 
I am including the following engravings which were published after the creation of Rysbrack's  busts and statuettes to show the continued afterlife of images of the sculptor.
 

 
 
Francois du Quesnoy
after Bellori (1630 - 96).
Engraved Benedetto Eredi,
pub. Hugford Florence,
1769 - 75
176 mm x 129 mm.
 
 
Francois du Quesnoy - il Fiammingo.
Anon. Engraving.
After the original by van Dyck. 
Presumed to be du Quesnoy now in the Musees Royaux des Beaux Arts, Brussels.
There appears to be some doubt as to the identity of the sitter
The British Museum suggest 17th century
 233 x 189 mm.
British Museum.
 For the original oil by van Dyck now in the Ryal Museum of Fine Art in Brussels, Belgium.
 
 
 
Francois du Quesnoy
after the original by Anthony van Dyck
Pieter van Bleek (1700 - 64).
Worked in London from 1723 until his death.
Mezzotint
1751
 354 mm ×  245 mm
 
 
Another disputed image of du Quesnoy after an original by Chatrles le Brun.
Later prints lettered below the image 'Done from a Picture in the Collection of the Right Honble, the Earl of Besborough. / Le Brun Pinxt. / Robt. Sayer Excudit /
W,, Pether fecit / London Printed for Robt,, Sayer May & Printseller, No. 53, Fleet Street.
The original is now in the Residenz Gallerie, Salzburg'. 503 x 354 mm.
 
____________________________________
 
 
 
 
Ivory relief believed to be Francois du Quesnoy.
 Signed lower left: "G.VDR"
15 x 10cms
Gaspar van der Hagen.
 
Yale Centre for British Art, New Haven, Conn.
 
I include this relief here for comparison with the engraved images of du Quesnoy. There are several  ivory reliefs with a similar monogram. Van der Hagen worked with Michael Rysbrack from 1743 until about 1767.
 
see also blog entry for 7 November 2015.
 
 

Monday, 9 November 2015

The Rysbrack Statuettes of Rubens, van Dyck and du Quesnoy, Part 7. Engraved sources van Dyck.

The Engraved Portraits of Anthony van Dyck.
 
Included here are a selection of engravings made prior to 1743 which would have been available to Michael Rysbrack when produced his portrait bust and statuette of van Dyck. With two exceptions they are all based on the original etched self portrait or that plate which was completed by Lucas Vorsterman I
 

Anthony van Dyck.
Original etched self portrait.
92 x 102 mm (cut).
British Museum.
 
 
by Jacobus Neeffs (Neefs), after Sir Anthony van Dyck
etching, circa 1645
 242 mm x 157 mm.
 
The famous self-portrait captures the immediacy of an autograph drawing, while leaving the bust of the figure to be completed by a specialist engraver. The backward glance suggests spontaneous movement, while the stipple technique indicates that van Dyck had been inspired in Italy by the engraved portraits by Ottavio Leoni. The unfinished state may mean that van Dyck distributed the print in this form among the friends and patrons, who would have appreciated, too, the superior quality of an early impression.

On his return to Flanders from Italy in 1628, van Dyck planned an ambitious project to publish portrait prints of distinguished contemporaries, which became known as his Iconographia. Initially he etched the heads, but he soon left all the printmaking to specialist engravers such as Paulus Pontius, supplying them with oil sketches and drawings from which to work. 52 of the 80 portraits published in the 1630s represent artists or art connoisseurs. They are shown elegantly dressed and at their ease, in a clear attempt to enhance the social status of the profession.
 
After van Dyck's early death, the publisher Gillis Hendricx reissued the plates with this self-portrait as the title-page. A bust was added below and set on a base, with a Latin inscription announcing that the portraits were drawn from life by van Dyck, who had had them engraved at his own expense.

see C. de Pauw and G. Luijten, Anthony van Dyckas a print maker, exh. cat. (Antwerpen Open, 1999)
 This info lifted from British Museum Website.
 
 
 
Anthony van Dyck
engraved by John Savage, pub. by John Lloyd
London, c.1683 -1700.
117 x 103mm.
British Museum
 
 
 
Anthony van Dyck,
reverse engraving c.1654 - 64,
Engraved by Richard Gaywood, pub. Peter Stent,
113 x 99 mm.
British Museum
 
 
Engraving by Wenceslaus Hollar after the Self  Portrait by Anthony van Dyck. 1644. The imagery of this portrait has been a matter of study and debate since the prototype. (Collection of the Duke of Westminster) was executed in 1632/3. It is an exuberant piece in which the painter displays a valuable gold chain, perhaps that given to him by the King in 1632, when he was knighted and made
painter to the King and Queen, and gestures to a sunflower. Whether this motif suggests the courtier's dependence in all things on the King - as the immense popularity of this image during the Civil War might suggest - or his devotion to the cause of Art - as John Evelyn certainly believed some decades later - has never satisfactorily been resolved, and it may be that both possibilities were always intended. Gold chains were traditional as gifts from sovereigns to painters, and when Van Dyck painted himself wearing one they were alsoa highly-prized element of fashionable costume. The painting's function is - if incidentally- documentary as much as it is
allegorical. Several copies of the oil portrait exist.
info Lifted from Historical portraits website
 
Anthony van Dyke,
from his own etched self portrait - the first engraving on this page
by Lucas Vorsterman (1595 - 1675).
245 x 157mm.
British Museum.
Vorsterman had worked for Rubens and was his most talented engraver but famously had a violent falling out with him in 1621, Rubens was godfather to his son Lucas II. It is believed that he suffered some sort of nervous breakdown. He was in England between 1624 and 1630.  He went on to work for van Dyck helping to produce 22 of the original 80 plates for his Iconography. Van Dyck engraved his portrait which has a singularly haunted look about it. I include it here because I believe it to be a wonderful portrait of a slightly disturbed man.
 
 
Lucas Vorsterman
Engraved by Anthony van Dyck
from Iconography.
 
 __________________________________
 
 
 
Anthony van Dyck.
Copy in reverse Engraving by Richard Gaywood,
after LucasVorsterman II,
pub. Peter Stent, London 1656.
 243 x 153 mm,
British Museum.
 
 
 
After a self portrait by Anthony van Dyck
After the original now in the Ufizzi Gallery Florence . c 1630.
by Giovanni Domenico Ferretti,
engraved by Pietro Antonio Pazzi, (1706 - 70), 
c. 1730 - 50.
266 x 180 mm.
British Museum.
 
It is unlikely, given the time frame, but possible that Rysbrack had seen this engraving before the production of his version of van Dyck.
 

Sunday, 8 November 2015

The Rysbrack Statuettes of Rubens, van Dyck and du Quesnoy, Part 6. Engraved Sources Rubens


The Bust of Rubens in the Jesuit Church, Antwerp.
destroyed in a Fire in 1718.
 
As a Catholic Michael Rysbrack would almost certainly have been aware of this bust and had seen it before emigrating to England in 1720. It is interesting to surmise whether the memory of it might have acted in some way as a catalyst for the recreation of the bust and statuette of Rubens sculpted 1743, but the inspiration almost certainly came from  a work by Johann Justin Preissler of 1735.


Red Chalk drawing by Jacob de Wit 
Bust of Rubens in Jesuit Church, Antwerp
291 x 282 mm.
British Museum.
 
This is the frontispiece to a set of thirty-six drawings in red chalk prepared by Jacob de Wit around 1718. They are based on (lost) sketches he made while a student in Antwerp from 1711-1712 at the city's Jesuit church.

When the main body of the church was destroyed by fire in 1718 after having been struck by lightning de Wit realised the importance of his drawings as testimonies for the lost paintings.

 Johan Van Gool  -'De nieuwe schouburg der Nederlantsche kunstschilders en schilderessen', The Hague, 1751, II, p.219) reports that this set was sold to Maria Elizabeth de Waal in 1751, after which it was sold in 1755 in Amsterdam.

Previous owner/ex-collection: George Guy Greville, 4th Earl of Warwick (1818 - 93)
(L.2600, Christie's, 20-21.v.1896/103).

The thirty-nine ceiling paintings which Rubens painted in 1620-1621 for the newly-built Jesuit Church in Antwerp constituted the most extensive commission he had received up to that time. They perished in the fire of 1718, however, many of Rubens´s spirited grisaille sketches and final oil sketches for the canvas paintings have survived, and they, together with documents and with contemporary copies by other artists, allow us to reconstruct not only the iconography and compositions of the paintings, but also their style and the overall effect of the series.
 
The church was rebuilt by Jan Pieter van Baurscheidt the Elder.
 
___________________________________________
 
 
Frontispiece to A Book of Engravings
after the lost ceiling pieces by Rubens and his studio in the Jesuit Church Antwerp.
Johann Justin Preissler (1698–1771).
Published by his brother Georg Martin Preissler.

Nuremburg 1735.
 
Illustrating busts of Rubens and van Dyck.
Note the turned socles and the palette.
 

 
http://digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/diglit/preissler1735/0011

The Rysbrack Statuettes of Rubens, van Dyck and du Quesnoy, Part 5, Sources Rubens.



The Engraved Portraits of Peter Paul Rubens, Prior to 1743.

As a collector, some or perhaps all of these engravings would have been available to Rysbrack.


Rysbrack was a prolific collector of engravings, see Rysbrack sale, Langfords of The Piazza Covent Garden, 15, 17 and 18th February, 1764, lot 60; Lot 24 and 25; lots 9, 10 and 11, heads by van Dyck.

The collection of engravings below is by no means exhaustive - others not included are variations of these



 
Engraved Portrait of Rubens by Wyngarde
after Wenceslaus Hollar (1607 -77).
Undated Mid 17th Century.
From the original portrait in the Rubenshuis,
285 x 223 mm.
British Museum.
 
 
Engraved Portrait of Rubens
after the Portrait now in Rubens House Antwerp 
153 x 115 mm
British Museum.
 
 
Engraved Portrait of Rubens
by Paulus Pontius after van Dyck,
Dated 1657.
155 x 112 mm.
British Museum.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Engraved Portrait by Johannes Meyssens,
after a Self Portrait by Sir Peter Paul Rubens now in the Royal Collection.,
c.1680.
 
 
Engraved portrait of Rubens after van Dyck, after Paulus Pontius.
by Abraham Lutma. c. 1650.
234 x 155 mm.
British Museum.
The original or a study for it is in the Rijksmusum, Amsterdam.
 
A pair of related grisailles are at Boughton House, Northamptonshire.
Variations of this engraved portrait are probably the primary source for Rysbrack's representations of Rubens
 
 
Engraved Portrait of Rubens
Rene Lochon,
Paris c. 1650.
162 x 121 mm.
 
 
Engraved Portrait of Peter Paul Rubens
After the original by Van Dyke ,
Engraved by R Gaywood, 1656.
 
 
 
 
Engraving of Rubens after the Self Portrait in the Uffizi Gallery, Florence.
Georg Marin Preisler,
Nuremberg c. 1740.
273 x 175 mm
 
 
 
Engraved Portrait of Rubens
after van Dyck,
 by Jean Audran.
pub. by Gaspard Duchange, Paris 1710,
 
504 x 354 mm
 
 
Anonymous Engraving of Rubens aged 46, c. 1700 - 50,
150 x 207mm.
After the self-portrait by Rubens in the Royal Collection at Windsor Castle, signed and dated 1623, P
ainted for the future Charles I.
It is mentioned in a letter of 10 January 1623 from Rubens to Valavez.
(see R. Magurn, 'Letters of Rubens' no.60).