View Haarlemmerpoort Amsterdam, seen from the city from the Haarlemmerdijk . It was built between 1615 and 1618 by Hendrik de Keyser designed Haarlemmerpoort. On the street various figures. Among the show title in Dutch and French. Upper right numbered 4. Manufacturer : printmaker: Caspar Jacobsz. Philips (listed building) in its design: Caspar Jacobsz. Philips (listed building) publisher: Pierre Fouquet (listed property) Place manufacture: Amsterdam Date: 1765 - 1783 Material: paper Technique: etching / engra (printing process) Dimensions: plate edge: H 285 mm × W 373 mmToelichtingDeze print
View Haarlemmerpoort Amsterdam, seen from the city from the Haarlemmerdijk . It was built between 1615 and 1618 by Hendrik de Keyser designed Haarlemmerpoort. On the street various figures. Among the show title in Dutch and French. Upper right numbered 4. Manufacturer : printmaker: Caspar Jacobsz. Philips (listed building) in its design: Caspar Jacobsz. Philips (listed building) publisher: Pierre Fouquet (listed property) Place manufacture: Amsterdam Date: 1765 - 1783 Material: paper Technique: etching / engra (printing process) Dimensions: plate edge: H 285 mm × W 373 mmToelichtingDeze print is also used in the so-called Atlas of Fouquet * Pierre Fouquet gave 1760 as city faces of Amsterdam -. drawings by different artists, made by different makers print - out. These prints were initially sold individually or in sets. As usual when the buyer was able to bind the prints themselves. To this end, Fouquet gave between 1778 and 1783, a title page, table of contents and plan of the previously released 100 prints from (1). Given the content depended on what the buyer had gathered different contents of the various preservation: the Fouquetatlassen strongly under this title. There are also known instances where other prints are also added. Because there appeared to need an explanation of the plates was issued a new version of the atlas in 1783, supplemented with text and two prints. The order changed but the plates already issued prints remained unchanged. This edition was printed by order of Daniel Jean Fouquet in Changuion and Peter den Hengst (2). A dozen plates was updated and appeared, with new imprint, in the continuation of Wagenaars history of Amsterdam, editing by Peter Conradi and Folkert van der Post (3). A few years after the death of Fouquet Evert Maaskamp came out with a new edition of the atlas, with improved text and adding two prints. All plates removed he put the old and left his own imprint (4). The current state of the print occurs in copies of the bott
Size: 1740px × 1436px
Photo credit: © Art World / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
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