PCT-60696

Antique Print of the Statue of Pan and Syrinx in Rome by Van Dalen (1660)

  • Condition: Good, given age. A few spots in the margins. General age-related toning and/or occasional minor defects from handling. Please study scan carefully.
  • Date: 1660
  • Overall size: 19 x 31 cm.
  • Image size: 13 x 23 cm.
Free
Worldwide
shipping

€ 124,50($ 146.52 / £ 113.68)

Make offer  

.. Antique Print of the Statue of Pan and Syrinx in Rome by Van Dalen (1660)

Description: Antique print, titled: 'Pan Phebum Syringae modos edocens in Hortis Ludovisianis.' - Statue of Pan and Syrinx in Rome. In classical mythology, Syrinx was a nymph and a follower of Artemis. Pan is the god of the wild, shepherds and flocks, nature of mountain wilds and rustic music, and companion of the nymphs.

From the 1660 Dutch edition of 'Icones et Segmenta Nobil. Signorum et Statuarum quae Romae extant' by Francois Perrier. This first Dutch edition was published by Nicolaas Visscher, printed in 1660 (Amsterdam). Although Perrier was French, he fell in love with Rome when he traveled there first in 1628 and then returning in 1635 and remaining for 10 years. While there, he completed this series of 100 views of Roman statuary in the various palaces and gardens, including the Medici and Vatican gardens and the Palazzo Farnese.

Artists and Engravers: Made by 'Cornelis van Dalen' after 'Francois Perrier'. Cornelis van Dalen the elder (ca. 1602-1665) or Cornelis van Dalen de Jonge (ca. 1638-1664), father and son, both Dutch engravers. Francois Perrier (Pontarlier 1590 - Paris 1650) was a French painter and etcher. He resided in Rome from 1620 to 1625, where he became a follower of Giovanni Lanfranco and worked with De Cortona and Carracci. He then returned to France, and settles in Paris in 1630. There, Perrier worked in the circle of Vouet and had Charles Le Brun as his pupil. He is mostly remembered for his two series of prints after classical sculptures. These provided visual repertoires of classical models for generations of European artists and collectors.