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Title Page with a portrait of Giovanni Battista Piranesi

Print
1779 (made), 1803-1807 (published)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Volume I of 27 folio volumes with Giovanni Battista and Francesco Piranesi works published in Paris by the Calcographie des Piranesi frères (1800-1807).

This volume contains 77 plates (folio and large folio), uniformly bound in red half morocco over marbled boards by Tessier, Paris (label in each volume), spines with raised bands gilt. For the complete set of prints in this volume see accession numbers: E. 3958-4034-1908. The copperplates are in the Istituto Centrale per la Grafica, Rome.

The first edition of Piranesi’s Roman Antiquities was published in 1756, in four volumes, with the original title ‘LE ANTICHITÀ ROMANE OPERA DI GIAMBATTISTA PIRANESI ARCHITETTO VENEZIANO DIVISA IN QUATTRO TOMI [...] IN ROMA MDCCLVI Nella Stamperia di Angelo Rotilj nel Palazzo de’ Massimi. Con licenza de' superiori si vendono in Roma dai Signori Bouchard, e Gravier Mercanti libraj al Corso presso san Marcello.’ Piranesi had obtained the sponsorship for this book from the Irish nobleman, Lord Charlemont, to whom it was dedicated. With the rapid accumulation of material the project expanded. Piranesi was promised Charlemont’s financial support for the four-volume work; however, by the time that the Antichità appeared in 1756, Charlemont had returned to Ireland and Piranesi, despite several letters to his patron, failed to receive the substantial payment he was counting on. In exasperation he eventually deleted the dedication to Charlemont from the main frontispiece to Volume I, and issued the Lettere di Giustificazione a Milord Charlemont as a defence of his action. Further alterations took place when Francesco Piranesi issued another edition in 1784. In this, the much-altered title page to Volume I, which appears to have gone through at least three states in 1756-57, was change yet again, this time to receive a dedication to Gustav III of Sweden an important patron on Francesco.

The plates of the Antichità include works by or after other artists, chiefly in Volume II and III. In the Antichità Piranesi consciously sets out to apply a completely new system of archaeological inquiry to the study of the remains of antiquity. The first volume explains the urban structure of ancient Rome in terms of its walls, defences ad aqueducts as well as its civic and religious monuments. The next two volumes, which incorporate the plates of the Camera Sepolcrali, are devoted to the extensive remains of tombs ad funerary monuments around Rome. The final volume expounds the heroic feats of Roman engineering represented by bridges and monumental structures. According to Wilton Ely, the exaggerated scale and the concern with technology of these latter works, there are already signs of Piranesi’s attempts to counteract the increasing claims for the superiority of Greek art and architecture being made by Winkelman and Laugier.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Titles
  • Title Page with a portrait of Giovanni Battista Piranesi
  • Roman Antiquities (Paris edition) (series title)
Materials and techniques
Etching with engraving, ink on paper
Brief description
Title page with a cameo portrait of Giovanni Battista Piranesi, from a set of 77 plates, G. Piranesi, Le Antichità Romane, vol. I, etching with engraving, by Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Rome, with the cameo portrait engraved by Francesco Piranesi after Joseph Cades, 1779, bound in Paris by Tessier, 1803-1807
Physical description
Portrait format title page comprising an engraved portrait of Giovanni Battista Piranesi in imitation of an antique bust, inscribed with the title in Latin on a stone surrounded by classical ruins, an ancient Roman vase and a spiral-twist column, to the lower right a capital with Roman triumphs and to the left two trompe l’oeil images of archaeological plans of the City of Rome.
Dimensions
  • Height: 42.5cm
  • Width: 31.5cm
  • Volume height: 57.5cm
  • Volume weight: 43.5cm
  • Volume depth: 3cm
The dimensions refer to the print only.
Style
Marks and inscriptions
Upper centre, on the stone: ‘EQVES . IO . BAPT . PIRANESIVS VENETVS . ARCHITECTVS /VIX . ANN . LIIX/ OB . V. ID . NOVEMB . CIƆIƆCCLXXIIX’ Signature, lower left: ‘Franciscus Piranesius invenit et sculpsit 1779’ and to the right: ‘Josephus Cades vultum delineavit’

Translation
Cav. Battista Piranesi Venetian architect Francesco Piranesi invented and engraved Josephus Cades depicted the face
Object history
The image on the title page is a copy of a self-portrait by Piranesi, copied by his son for the title page of this volume.

The collection of volumes was previously owned by Decimus Burton and his bookplate is pasted in the inside cover of this volume.
Production
Lettered on the spine of the volume: ‘G. PIRANESI/ LE / ANTICHITA’/ ROMANE/ VOL.I’

Labelled inside the front cover: 'Rue de la Harpe Au-dessus de celle de Medectne, N 132 ; / TESSIER, / Relieur et Doreur de la Trisorerie Nationale, du Bureau de la Guerre et Calcographie piranesi A PARIS'

Bookplate of architect Decimus Burton (1800-1881)
Subjects depicted
Place depicted
Summary
Volume I of 27 folio volumes with Giovanni Battista and Francesco Piranesi works published in Paris by the Calcographie des Piranesi frères (1800-1807).

This volume contains 77 plates (folio and large folio), uniformly bound in red half morocco over marbled boards by Tessier, Paris (label in each volume), spines with raised bands gilt. For the complete set of prints in this volume see accession numbers: E. 3958-4034-1908. The copperplates are in the Istituto Centrale per la Grafica, Rome.

The first edition of Piranesi’s Roman Antiquities was published in 1756, in four volumes, with the original title ‘LE ANTICHITÀ ROMANE OPERA DI GIAMBATTISTA PIRANESI ARCHITETTO VENEZIANO DIVISA IN QUATTRO TOMI [...] IN ROMA MDCCLVI Nella Stamperia di Angelo Rotilj nel Palazzo de’ Massimi. Con licenza de' superiori si vendono in Roma dai Signori Bouchard, e Gravier Mercanti libraj al Corso presso san Marcello.’ Piranesi had obtained the sponsorship for this book from the Irish nobleman, Lord Charlemont, to whom it was dedicated. With the rapid accumulation of material the project expanded. Piranesi was promised Charlemont’s financial support for the four-volume work; however, by the time that the Antichità appeared in 1756, Charlemont had returned to Ireland and Piranesi, despite several letters to his patron, failed to receive the substantial payment he was counting on. In exasperation he eventually deleted the dedication to Charlemont from the main frontispiece to Volume I, and issued the Lettere di Giustificazione a Milord Charlemont as a defence of his action. Further alterations took place when Francesco Piranesi issued another edition in 1784. In this, the much-altered title page to Volume I, which appears to have gone through at least three states in 1756-57, was change yet again, this time to receive a dedication to Gustav III of Sweden an important patron on Francesco.

The plates of the Antichità include works by or after other artists, chiefly in Volume II and III. In the Antichità Piranesi consciously sets out to apply a completely new system of archaeological inquiry to the study of the remains of antiquity. The first volume explains the urban structure of ancient Rome in terms of its walls, defences ad aqueducts as well as its civic and religious monuments. The next two volumes, which incorporate the plates of the Camera Sepolcrali, are devoted to the extensive remains of tombs ad funerary monuments around Rome. The final volume expounds the heroic feats of Roman engineering represented by bridges and monumental structures. According to Wilton Ely, the exaggerated scale and the concern with technology of these latter works, there are already signs of Piranesi’s attempts to counteract the increasing claims for the superiority of Greek art and architecture being made by Winkelman and Laugier.
Bibliographic references
  • John Wilton-Ely, Giovanni Battista Piranesi. The Complete Etchings, 2 vols., 1st ed., San Francisco: Alan Wofsy Fine Arts, 1994 pp. 327-28
  • From the bookbinders sticker on the inside cover of Volume 1 of 'Le Antichita Romane di Giambatista Piranesi.'
Collection
Accession number
E.3958-1908

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
Record URL
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