Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level C , Case 92, Shelf D, Box 60A

Design

Late 16th century (made)
Artist/Maker

Plate after Bernardo Buentalenti depicting 'The Harmony of the Spheres' from 'La Pellegrina'. The musical "Intermezzi" La Pellegrina was staged to celebrate the marriage of Christine of Lorraine to Ferdinand de Medici on 2 May 1589.

John Talman (1677-1726) was the son of the celebrated architect William Talman. From about 1698 he was employed by his father to help assemble material for his extensive collection of architectural drawings, prints and books. A keen traveller, he went to the Continent twice in search of acquisitions. He visited the northern Netherlands, France, Germany and Italy, and he made numerous watercolour copies of altarpieces and churches in Rome.

Talman was back in England in 1715. He was a founder-member of the Tavern Society, London, which later became the Society of Antiquaries, and he was appointed its first director. Like his father, Talman believed in the elevating purpose of art and in the use of art collections for the public good. Although his will indicates that he had wanted his vast collection (which contained over 32,000 prints and drawings), to go to Trinity College, Cambridge, he later changed his mind and instructed that it should be sold for the benefit of his children. A portion of the collection was nonetheless given outright to the Society of Antiquaries, who acquired further items from the auction in London on 19 April 1727.


Object details

Object type
Brief description
Plate after Bernardo Buentalenti depicting 'The Harmony of the Spheres' from 'La Pellegrina'.
Summary
Plate after Bernardo Buentalenti depicting 'The Harmony of the Spheres' from 'La Pellegrina'. The musical "Intermezzi" La Pellegrina was staged to celebrate the marriage of Christine of Lorraine to Ferdinand de Medici on 2 May 1589.

John Talman (1677-1726) was the son of the celebrated architect William Talman. From about 1698 he was employed by his father to help assemble material for his extensive collection of architectural drawings, prints and books. A keen traveller, he went to the Continent twice in search of acquisitions. He visited the northern Netherlands, France, Germany and Italy, and he made numerous watercolour copies of altarpieces and churches in Rome.

Talman was back in England in 1715. He was a founder-member of the Tavern Society, London, which later became the Society of Antiquaries, and he was appointed its first director. Like his father, Talman believed in the elevating purpose of art and in the use of art collections for the public good. Although his will indicates that he had wanted his vast collection (which contained over 32,000 prints and drawings), to go to Trinity College, Cambridge, he later changed his mind and instructed that it should be sold for the benefit of his children. A portion of the collection was nonetheless given outright to the Society of Antiquaries, who acquired further items from the auction in London on 19 April 1727.
Collection
Accession number
E.217-1940

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Record createdAugust 5, 2008
Record URL
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