Ader
63
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VAN DYCK (Anthony). [Icones principum virorum doctorum picto…
See original version (French)
63
-
VAN DYCK (Anthony). [Icones principum virorum doctorum picto…
See original version (French)
Estimate €2,000 - €3,000
Voluntary lot
Description
VAN DYCK (Anthony).
[Icones principum virorum doctorum pictorum chalcographorum statuariorum nec non amatorum pictoriae artis numero centum].
S.l., c. 1665-1675. - Collection large in-4, 376 x 294: 121 plates. Black chagrin, cold fillets framing the boards, spine ribbed and decorated, red edges (19th century binding).
Mauquoy-Hendrickx, L'Iconographie d'Antoine Van Dyck, 1991.
Precious collection of 121 portraits engraved by or after the famous Flemish painter and engraver Anthony VAN DYCK (1599-1641).
Most of them come from the collection Icones principum virorum...
Anthony van Dyck (1599-1641), considered to be the greatest Flemish painter of the 17th century after Rubens, drew his inspiration as much from the work of his predecessor as from that of the Italian masters, particularly Titian, whose influence had a profound effect on his style. A virtuoso portraitist and painter of religious and mythological subjects, but also an exceptional draughtsman and engraver, he revolutionised the art of portraiture, both in painting and in etching.
A native of Antwerp, he distinguished himself early on by his exceptional talent. By 1615-1616, aged just 17, he was already independently signing his first works. After an initial spell in England in the service of James I (1621), he moved to Italy (1621-1627), where his portraits of the aristocracy, such as the Balbi Children, won him immediate renown.
Returning to the Netherlands, he settled permanently at the English court in 1632. His effigies of Charles I and his family revolutionised the art of portraiture, leaving a lasting mark on British artistic history.
At the same time, Van Dyck was working on a daring graphic project: a series of prints conceived between his return from Italy (1626) and his departure for England (1632). Based on extremely fine preparatory drawings (in chalk or brush), this undertaking called on the best engravers in Rubens's workshop, and included among its highlights plates engraved in his own hand, such as the striking portrait of Pieter Brueghel the Younger.
The first edition of this collection, entitled Icones principum virorum..., appeared incompletely in Antwerp between 1635 and 1636. After Van Dyck's death, the original plates were probably acquired by Maarten van den Enden and passed on to Gillis Hendricx. He published a complete edition in 1645, with a frontispiece engraved by Jacob Neefs, and continued to distribute them until his death in 1677. Subsequent editions appeared in the 17th and 18th centuries, thanks in particular to Johannes Meyssens, who added 74 additional portraits in the same spirit.
The present collection includes the portraits from the 1645 edition, in a later print run, without the publisher's references, and with the watermark of the 7-toothed folly, the one referenced as number 115 by Mauquoy-Hendrickx, which places the print run between 1665 and 1675.
Of the first 109 portraits found here, 13 were drawn and engraved by Van Dyck himself. These are the portraits of the painters Willem de Vos or Guillaume de Vos (c. 1593 - c. 1629), Frans Sniders (1579-1657), Paulus Pontius (1603-1658), Pieter Bruegel the Younger (1564-1638) and Giusto Sustermans (1597-1681), Josse de Momper (1564-1635), Adam Van Noort (1562-1641), Jan Baptiste de Wael, Joannes Snellinx, Jan Bruegel (1568-1625), Franciscus Franck, the engraver Lucas Vorsterman (1595-1675), and the humanist Erasmus (1469-1536). The portrait of the painter Joannes Snellinx is in two copies, one engraved by Van Dyck, the second by Pieter de Jode.
Four portraits are of women: Marie de Médicis (1573-1642), Isabelle-Claire-Eugénie, infanta of Spain (1566-1633), Geneviève d'Urfé (1598?-1656), Marguerite de Lorraine, duchesse d'Orléans (1615-1672).
This is followed by the superb series of twelve portraits, known as the Van Dyck Countesses, engraved by the French engraver Pierre Lombart (1612-1681), depicting countesses and barons of England. This series was engraved in the early 1660s.
Rubbing to binding, headpieces damaged, corners dulled. First cover and spine unbound. Soiling to some plates and some rare foxing. Staining to the third plate and restorations to this same plate and to plates 4, 22, 46, 61, 67, 86, and 96, with damage only to engraving 22.
See original version (French)
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About the sale
ENLUMINATIONS, ANCIENT and MODERN BOOKS
Auction location
Auction time
06/17/2026 at 2:00 PM
Pictures credits: Contact the Auction House
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