Skip to main content

Amsterdam Book Fair. Highlights

Page 1

Inspired by Rembrandt and Poussin: a guide to painting 1.

DE LAIRESSE, Gerard A Treatise on the Art of Painting in all its branches; accompanied by seventy engraved plates, and exemplified by remarks on the paintings of the best masters, illustrating the subject by reference to their beauties and imperfections. By Gerard de Lairesse. Revised, corrected, and accompanied with an essay, by W.M.Craig, painter to Her Majesty and the Duke and Duchess of York. London: Published and Sold by Edward Orme. 1817 Two volumes. 4to. 270x205mm. pp. viii, 296; 294. Seventy-one engraved plates. Contemporary straightgrained dark blue morocco, borders in gilt and blind to upper and lower covers. Spine with four raised bands, decorated and lettered in gilt. Small round shelf label to foot of spine of volume one. All edges gilt. Seventy-one plates. Additional engraved illustrated title page to volume two. Slight scuffing to boards in two places and minor rubbing to extremities. Internally some browning and foxing but overall a very good copy in a handsome binding. Lairesse (1641-1711) was a major figure in the art world of the Dutch Golden Age. He began his career as a painter, influenced initially by Rembrandt (who painted him - the portrait is in the Metropolitan in New York) and, later, by the French masters, especially Poussin. In 1690 he lost his sight due to congenital syphilis and so concentrated on art theory, writing two important works on the subject, Grondlegginge Ter Teekenkonst (1701) and Het Groot Schilderboek (1707) The Treatise on the Art of Painting is the English version of the second of these. Lairesse’s theories departed from the practice of


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Amsterdam Book Fair. Highlights by voewoodrarebooks - Issuu