Callot Gravure à l'eau-forte | Birth of the Virgin (Vendu)
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Callot, Jacques, Birth of the Virgin


Jacques Callot, Gravure à l'eau-forte, Birth of the Virgin

Callot, Gravure à l'eau-forte, Birth of the Virgin

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Artiste: Callot, Jacques (1592 - 1635)
Titre: Birth of the Virgin
Moyen:
Gravure à l'eau-forte
Taille d'image: 2.75 in x 1.75 in
Prix:
Article# 2327
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  • Callot, Birth of the Virgin from Life of the Virgin, c. 1632 - 1633
  • Callot, The Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian, c. 1634
  • Callot, The Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian, c. 1634
  • Callot, La Triomphe de la Vierge, ou Petite Thèse (Triumph of the Virgin or Small Thesis), 1625

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La biographie de Jacques Callot

French engraver and draughtsman. Jacques Callot went to Italy when he was in his teens and, working in Rome and then in Florence at the court of the Grand Duke Cosimc II (1590-1621), he learned to combine the sophisticated techniques and exaggerations of late Mannerism with witty and acute observation into a brilliantly expressive idiom. Returning to France in 1621 he became one of the chief exponents of the bizarre and grotesque which came into vogue in the reign of Louis XIII (1601-43). Most of the remainder of his career was spent in his native Nancy, but he also worked in Paris and the Low Countries. He made a specialty of beggars and deformities, characters from the picaresque novel and the Italian commedia dell'arte. In this respect he comes close to Bellange, also active in Nancy, but Callot's style was more realistic. His last great work, the series of etchings entitled the Grandes Miséres de la Guerre followed the invasion of Lorraine by Car Richelieu in 1633, and is a harrowing depiction the atrocities of war; its themes and imagery were used as a source by Goya. His output was prodigious; more than a thousand Callot etchings and drawings by him are extant, and some of his plates are large, featuring scores of brilliantly arranged figures. Jacques Callot was one of the greatest of all etchers and one of the first major creative artists to work exclusively in the graphic arts.