THE PROPERTY OF A NEW ENGLAND LIBRARY*
(Lots 652-702)
The following lots are being offered on behalf of a New England Library. No sales tax is due on the purchase price of any of these lots if they are picked up or delivered in the State of New York (see notice on p. *** for complete details). As institutional copies, their condition varies, and includes library marks and stamps on some bindings and plates. These lots are being sold as collections of plates, not subject to return.
PIRANESI, Giovanni Battista (1720-78). Le Antichita Romane. Rome: Salamoni, 1784.
Details
PIRANESI, Giovanni Battista (1720-78). Le Antichita Romane. Rome: Salamoni, 1784.
4 volumes, 2o. 224 numbered plates, portrait of Piranesi replacing Polanzani portrait and dedication to Gustavus III replacing that to the public and posterity. 19th-century red quarter morocco (worn, some joints broken).
Later edition. The publication of the Antichita confirmed Piranesi as "the foremost artistic proponent of Roman architecture" (Robison, Piranesi (1986) p.11). It depicts archaeological monuments and sites, sepulchral monuments, reconstructions of engineering feats, ancient bridges, baths and other structures. The etchings, with their combination of technical skill, historical accuracy and artistic vision, show that, as Robert Adam observed, "he alone might be said to breath the Antient Air." See Hind 183-4; See Focillon 144-395. (4)
4 volumes, 2o. 224 numbered plates, portrait of Piranesi replacing Polanzani portrait and dedication to Gustavus III replacing that to the public and posterity. 19th-century red quarter morocco (worn, some joints broken).
Later edition. The publication of the Antichita confirmed Piranesi as "the foremost artistic proponent of Roman architecture" (Robison, Piranesi (1986) p.11). It depicts archaeological monuments and sites, sepulchral monuments, reconstructions of engineering feats, ancient bridges, baths and other structures. The etchings, with their combination of technical skill, historical accuracy and artistic vision, show that, as Robert Adam observed, "he alone might be said to breath the Antient Air." See Hind 183-4; See Focillon 144-395. (4)