SANDRART, Jacob von
Jacob von Sandrart (1630-1708) was a German painter and engraver. He started learning the art of printmaking in his uncle’s workshop in Amsterdam, at the age of ten and was professionally active principally in Nuremberg. He married an engraver’s daughter and they had nine children. One of his daughters also became an engraver. Sandrart was a prolific artist, of whom four hundred signed engravings have survived. He was famous for his portraits of eminent citizens of Nuremberg and for his views and maps of cities in Europe and Africa. He was also the first director of the Nuremberg Academy of Fine Arts. In the prints in the present work, the influence of similar copperplate engravings of the late sixteenth century are discernible. Certain views of cities, although supposed to depict specific locations, are in reality imaginary representations.
Written by Ioli Vingopoulou
SANDRART, Jacob von - Marmara sea / Propontis
SANDRART, Jacob von - Rest Images
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Imaginary representation of city, perhaps of Edremit in Asia Minor.
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Map of the western part of the Corinthian Gulf and the Gulf of Patras.
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Frontispiece. Allegory of Venice's victory in the Sixth Ottoman-Venetian War.
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View of the Acropolis and the walls of Athens. On the right, the temple of Olympian Zeus.
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Map of the gulf of Lepanto, with the fortresses of Rio and Antirrion, and Patras.
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View of Edremit, Asia Minor; most possibly an imaginary depiction.