FROM A PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTION
Giovanni Battista Piranesi

Vedute di Roma (H. 1-12, 14-64; W.-E. 134-191, 193-7)

Details
Giovanni Battista Piranesi
Vedute di Roma (H. 1-12, 14-64; W.-E. 134-191, 193-7)
etchings, 1748, sixty-three plates as issued circa 1762, as listed in the Catalogo delle Opere date finora alla Luce da Gio. Battista Piranesi (Hind Pl. II) issued with this set (although without H. 13 in the sequence and with the addition of H. 64; the Catalogo has the etched titles of Hind 1-63, with a pencil manuscript addition of H. 64), together with the artist's printed introduction sheet to Della Magnificenza e Architettura de' Romani, listing the artist's work published to this date, and including the first 60 plates of the Vedute di Roma and with the addition of Hind 61 to the list in pen and brown ink, from Hind's Edition B3a-b, a contemporary Roman Edition, with Piranesi's address and price on all plates except the four that were issued without it, about two thirds of the plates that have rebiting and added work with that rebiting and added work, very fine impressions, watermark double-encircled Fleur-de-Lys (H. 3), with full margins, the usual central fold, H. 61-4 with a tear and small associated loss at the left of subject, one or two plates with short tears at the sheet edges, some plates with minor discolouration in the margins or at the sheet edges, stitchmarks at the left sheet edge, other defects, generally in very good condition, loose in contemporary marbled paper covers, several defects to the boards
overall S. 555 x 790mm. (65)

Lot Essay

Giovanni Battista Piranesi is famous as the greatest interpreter of Rome above all through the Vedute di Roma, begun in 1748 and continued throughout the remainder of his life.

The artist was to transform the conventional Veduta as practised by Giuseppe Vasi (with whom Piranesi first learned etching) into a vision of heroic antiquity, seen through the eyes of an architect and archaeologist who passionately believed in Roman classical antiquity as a living inspiration to the present. Through his works the artist was to become an international figure of the Enlightenment, and the leading protagonist of Roman achievement as opposed to Winckelmann and the supporters of Greece.

The new large plate format of the Vedute di Roma enabled the artist to take on the monumental spaces of the city, such as St. Peters (see illustration opposite, Hind 3) and to compete with the painted veduta of his contemporary Gian Paolo Panini.

The present set of Vedute represents the series in an early form, with Piranesi's address and price, including the plates made up to 1762. The impressions are finer and stronger than with those in the later contemporary editions of the full set of plates issued around 1778.

The Vedute in this collection rank amongst the artist's greatest plates, and arefoutstanding for their fine, clean printing in dark black ink and for the rich and painterly variety of tones achieved through repeated bitings of the acid. The use of plunging diagonals and powerful tonal recessions, for example in the steep, almost vertiginous perspective of the façade of S. Paolo fuori le Mura (Hind 6), achieves unrivalled dramatic effects. The façade, brought close to the picture plane, is made to tower above the spectator by lowering the viewpoint, thus creating a vision of formidable and awesome monumentality.
'In the course of thirty-five years, Piranesi had transformed the Veduta from a subtle Rococo vision of elusive melancholy to an uncompromising statement of the Sublime which was to leave an indelible impression on the sensibilities of European Romanticism.' (John Wilton-Ely, Piranesi Exhibition Catalogue, Arts Council of Great Britain, 1978)

More from Prints

View All
View All