The full sheet, 1 3/4 x 5 1/4, the sheet 5 1/2 x 9 inches. Printed in brownish/black ink on a cream laid paper with a partial Strasbourg Lily watermark. James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834-1903), Chelsea Embankment, etching, 1886, signed with the butterfly in the plate. Note: I am indebted to Sarah Sauvin for her exemplary description and discussion of this print, and have taken her description verbatim from her catalog entry on the print. Was the mirror a commission by Catherine de Medici which she grew particularly fond? Did Delaune want to use it for advertisement purposes? (LOrfevre et graveur Etienne Delaune (1518/19-1583): questions et hypotheses, in Comptes rendus des seances de l’Academie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, Annee 2009, 153-2, p. In an attempt to prevent against fakes, it was rare for a goldsmith to publish the complete image of an object he had created, unless the object was famous or represented a form of consecration for its creator. Michle Bimbenet-Privat remarks that these designs for two mirrors are exceptional among prints engraved by Delaune, which typically feature series of stories or ornamental panels, all of a small size. The two designs for mirrors Delaune engraved in 1561 are an exception: they are not drawings, but engravings. He also used such scenes from Ovid to decorate ewers on sketches that are in the collection of the Bibliothque nationale de France. His designs were often inspired by Ovid’s Metamorphoses. He also created for Catherine of Medici a mirror which was turned into a reliquary at a later date (see below). (Robert-Dumesnil 315)Įtienne Delaune, a goldsmith, produced numerous projects for ornaments, of which the most famous is the design for Henri II’s suit of armour, inspired by the rivalry between Caesar and Pompey (1559). The main subject is surrounded with numerous allegorical figures, putti, animals and ornamentation.Ī similar mirror, also dated 1561, with the title IULIA, represents the death of Julia, daughter of Titus, dying in the arms of two of her servants, because of a poisoned drink. Four tiny pinholes in the corners.įor this design, Delaune has chosen the myth of Medea rejuvenating Aeson at the request of his son Jason, according to the version of the myth in Book VII of Ovid’s Metamorphoses. The title MEDEA is engraved under the cauldron and the date 1561 on the mirrors frame.įine impression, a little dry in the middle and on the left, printed on laid watermarked paper (indistinct letters).
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