PIRANESI Giovanni Battista Diverse Maniere d’adornare i Cammini / Divers Manners of Ornamenting / Chimneys / Différentes manières d’orner les cheminées.

VENDU

Rome, stamperia di generoso Salmoni, 1769

Large folio (565 x 415 mm) title in typescript, engraved double page with dedication, 1 leaf of typescript dedication, 35 pp. (with text Italian, English, and French), 4 engraved plats bound in the text (including 2 plates depicting shells, 1 plate depicting details of Etruscan art ; 1 plate depicting household effects including a chair and a commode), 1 index leaf explaining the plate of Etruscan art, 66 engraved plates (mostly numbered). Contemporary Roman calf by the Salvioni bindery, covers richly decorated in Rocaille style, inlaid border in calf richly decorated with a large floral rule, central panel gilt with individual tools large corner piece, spine with raised bands, compartments gilt with a large tool depicting a flower, inner dentelle, endpapers with decorative floral pattern, gilt edges (some light wear to hinges and to spine).

Catégories:
75000,00 

1 in stock

The Tsar’s copy from Tsarskoye Selo bound in Rome by Salvioni

Hind, p. 86 ; Wilton-Ely, II, nos. 815-887 ; Ficacci, nos. 629-699 ; Kat. Berlin, 3820.

First edition of this magnificent work of ornamentation. It is dedicated to Cardinal Giambattista Rezzonico, one of Piranesi’s patrons. Published at the height of Piranesi’s career as an engraver, it celebrates the influence of Etruscan and Egyptian art on classical Graeco-Roman art.

“This work appeared at the end of the most significant and productive decade in Piranesi’s career, in terms of both theory and practice. It appropriately brings together a considered statement of his radical aesthetic, first voice in the Parere su l’Architettura, and an impressive corpus of design ostensibly executed according to his theoretical standpoint. Equally appositely the book is dedicated tone of the most sympathetic patrons, Cardinal Giambattista Rezzonico, and is addressed to an international audience of patrons and designers through parallel texts in Italian, French and English… [In the 1764-1765] Piranesi undertook various schemes of interior decorations, often involving furniture, for the Pope at Castel Gandolfo, for the Cardinal at the Lateran and for Senator Abbondio Rezzonico at the Palazzo Senatorio. In this period the artist designed the painted decorations in the Egyptian style for the Caffè degli Inglesi in the Piazza di Spagna and also devised several ornamental chimneypieces, ingeniously incorporating antique fragments, for various foreign clients. The architectural commissions apart, most of these achievements ae represented among the group of 67 plates in the Diverse Maniere. These images illustrate the text expounding bis philosophy of design, which opens the book…. Piranesi’s criteria are essentially visual rather than literary, and he aired some extremely original ideas on the stylization of natural forms in antiquity. The plates which follow are intended to point out these observations, and Piranesi is anxious to point out that he has given a particular prominence to the chimneypiece. The 61 chimneypiece designs illustrated range from relatively restrained essays, such as those already created for the Earl of Exeter, John Hope and Senator Rezzonico to highly involved confections combining Roman and Etruscan motifs… Notable both in the Essay and in the plates is the unprecedented attention given to Egyptian style, which is represented by 11 chimneypieces and illustrations of two walls from the Caffè degli Inglesi… The preparation of the Diverse Maniere, like that of other publication among Piranesi’s more ambitious works, appears to have covered several years, and the sequence of plates frequently varies from copy to copy” (Wilton-Ely).

The Tsar’s copy

The copy bears the seal of the Tsar’s library in Tsarskoye Selo. It is likely that Tsarevich Paul Petrovich I (1754-1801) acquired it during his excursion to Rome in 1782 together with his wife Maria Feodorovna, born Princess Sophie Dorothea of Württemberg (1759-1828). This copy was part of a series of major sales organized by the Soviet state in the 1930s.

Magnificent copy, well preserved in its original binding by the Salvioni bindery at Rome. It is complete with all its required 73 engravings (1 double leaf of engraved dedication ; 4 plates bound in the text ; 66 mostly numbered plates ; 1 head-, and one tail-piece).

Other provenance: Hans Marcus (bookseller at Cologne) – Private collection.

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