The little book of architecture ruins
Etching
1550-1562 (Printed)
1550-1562 (Printed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This print is based on an original design by Léonard Thiry, and it is a reverse copy by Virgil Solis after Jacques Androuet Du Cerceau’s prints from 1550. Solis was a prolific printmaker, whose workshop produced ornament prints intended for furniture decoration, jewelry and so on, as well as biblical illustrations. Solis borrowed from German and Italian engravers; this example shows him borrowing from Du Cerceau, who was French. Solis produced popular prints, and the antique theme in this print is typical of the time.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | The little book of architecture ruins (series title) |
Materials and techniques | Etching |
Brief description | Léonard Thiry. One of 8 plates from a suite of 12 views of ruins entitled 'The Little Book of Architectural Ruins'. Published by Virgil Solis, Nuremberg, 1550-1562. |
Physical description | Etching. |
Dimensions |
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Style | |
Credit line | From the Lanna Collection. |
Object history | From the Lanna collection (1107; Sr 6406). |
Historical context | This print belongs to a set of thirteen engravings by Virgil Solis which is referred to as ‘the little book of architecture ruins’ in The Illustrated Bartsch (vol. 19, part 1, pp. 161-167; B. 352a and B. 354 missing in the V&A collections). Solis actually copied Jacques Androuet Du Cerceau’s Duodecim Fragmenta structurae veteris published in 1550 in Orleans. Both Du Cerceau and Solis praise Léonard Thiry, the artist who made the original drawings. Thiry was a Flemish artist who worked in Fontainebleau with Fiorentino Rosso. It is not established whether he went to Rome; he could very well have been inspired by the many prints showing views of Rome that circulated at the time. The antique theme, and the taste for views of ruins were indeed widespread in the 16th century. Solis was a prolific printmaker, whose Nuremberg workshop produced ornament prints intended for furniture decoration, jewellery and so on, as well as biblical illustrations. Solis borrowed from German, Italian and French engravers. In the first print (The Illustrated Bartsch, p. 161, no. 352a), he explains that he has copied this set because it was unavailable in Germany: ' I have realized that it would be for the common good and that of all art lovers, if I were to publish it [...], so that our country would be as fortunate as the Italians and the French'. |
Production | Reversed copy by Virgil Solis from a set engraved by Jacques Androuet Ducerceau after Léonard Thiry, published in 1550. |
Subjects depicted | |
Places depicted | |
Summary | This print is based on an original design by Léonard Thiry, and it is a reverse copy by Virgil Solis after Jacques Androuet Du Cerceau’s prints from 1550. Solis was a prolific printmaker, whose workshop produced ornament prints intended for furniture decoration, jewelry and so on, as well as biblical illustrations. Solis borrowed from German and Italian engravers; this example shows him borrowing from Du Cerceau, who was French. Solis produced popular prints, and the antique theme in this print is typical of the time. |
Associated objects | |
Bibliographic references |
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Other number | B.361 - Le Peintre-Graveur |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.2856-1910 |
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Record created | June 30, 2009 |
Record URL |
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