Description: 17th c. etchings of Antonie van Waterloo are scarse. It is assumed by experts that Cornelis Danckerts II acquired control of the waterloo plates as early 1655, so well during Waterloo's lifetime. As such most 17th. C. plates are published by Danckerts. The numbering of the plates also points to that. The plates later passed over to the Ottens family earliest 1717.
Artists and Engravers: This plate was etched by the reknown Anthonie (Anthony) Waterloo. Although etched he is known to have added accents to his work by burin and other engraving techniques as well. Anthonie Waterloo (1609-1690) is born in Lille, but his family moved to Amsterdam probably to escape religious persecution. He was a painter and etcher and famous for his landscapes (136 items). He developed his own style, probably as an auto-didact. Although Waterloo traveled widely, many of his landscapes were probably imagined in the workshop and were influenced by the work of other landscapists.
Subject: Plate B: Landscape with man and woman crossing a wooden bridge over a stream (Hollstein 78). 17 th. c. ed. on paper with watermark: foolscap (c. 1670-1680). Expert assessment. Attractive subject.
Condition: Fair. Excellent impression. General age related toning with light soiling. Light folding, barely noticable on front. Paper loss in top and bottom left margin. Bottom right margin slightly remargined. Some remains of paper tape on rear from previous storing. This item has not been washed, cleaned, bleached, restored.
Size (in cm): The overall size is ca. 17.3 x 13.9 cm. The image size is ca. 15.5 x 13.1 cm.
Size (in inch): The overall size is ca. 6.8 x 5.5 inch. The image size is ca. 6.1 x 5.2 inch.
Medium: Etching on a verge type hand laid paper.
Location: TPCLA-C41-19
SKU: 36613
Section: LATPC-WATERLOO-ETCHINGS