ANONYMOUS, AFTER JEAN COUSIN THE ELDER (CIRCA 1490 - 1560)
ANONYMOUS, AFTER JEAN COUSIN THE ELDER (CIRCA 1490 - 1560)

A Man holding a Tablet

Details
ANONYMOUS, AFTER JEAN COUSIN THE ELDER (CIRCA 1490 - 1560)
A Man holding a Tablet
engraving, circa 1544, on laid paper, without watermark, a good impression of this extremely rare print, with thread margins, trimmed just inside the platemark in places, a tiny made-up paper loss at the left sheet edge, a very short tear at the upper sheet edge, generally in good condition
Plate 211 x 148 mm., Sheet 212 x 149 mm.
Provenance
Ernest-Théophile Devaulx (1831 - 1901), Paris, dated 1863 (Lugt 670).
Literature
Robert-Dumesnil, vol. X, p. 15;
Ambroise Firmin-Didot, Étude sur Jean Cousin, L'institut de France, Paris, 1872, no. 6, p. 110.

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Lot Essay

Both the subject and attribution of this very rare print remain unresolved. Tentatively attributed to Jean Cousin in 1865 by Robert-Dumesnil, it was more firmly assigned to Cousin by Firmin-Didot in his monograph of 1872, on the basis of its style and 'seriousness'. Current scholarship is divided as to whether Cousin engraved any prints himself; although the present engraving is now generally believed to be after a design by Cousin by an unknown artist. Surviving examples are of the greatest rarity: Firmin-Didot knew of only two impressions, one in the Bibliothèque impériale, Paris (now Bibliothèque nationale de France), and another in the collection of M. de Baudicour, the whereabouts of which are not known.

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