Cartari, Imagini Delli Dei De Gl’antichi.

Cartari, Imagini Delli Dei De Gl'antichi.

Cartari, Vicenzo. Imagini Delli Dei De Gl’antichi. Di Vicenzo Cartari Reggiano. Ridotte Da Capo À Piedi Alle Loro Reali, & Non Più Per L’adietro Osservate Simiglianze. First Edition. Venice, Tomasini, 1647. c. 21 x 15 cm. (22), 400 pages. Title page in red and black. Illustrated. Two folding Plates. Old calf binding. Rebacked in 2025. New end papers. Marbled edges. Very good condition. Binding rubbed and bumped. Some material losses to spine ends and corners. Occasional mild damp staining. Some bookworm channels at top of pages 370 to 388, not affecting text or images. Internally clean. A very nice copy.

Page 187 misnumbered 189.
Page 269 misnumbered 260.
No page 304 / 305, but text appears complete.
No page 354 / 355, but collation appears complete.
Page 367 misnumbered 973.

A nice copy of Cartari’s richly illustrated encyclopaedia of classical iconography, containing fascinating appendixes concerning deities of the West and East Indies by the Italian priest and antiquarian Lorenzo Pignoria (1571-163). This edition is considered as the most complete (Brunet): it was revised and corrected from the previous of 1626, the blocks were recut, and it includes two new woodcuts of the creator god of the Egyptians (p. 81) and of three cupids (324). Vincenzo Cartari (c. 1531 after 1571) was an Italian mythographer and diplomat, author of the first modern translation of Ovid s fasti. Born at Reggio Emilia, Cartari lived and worked in the entourage of the Dukes of Este at Ferrara. Images of the gods is his masterpiece, and one of the most widely read handbooks of ancient mythology of the Renaissance. First published in 1556 without illustrations, this work went through at least 25 editions in different languages. The first illustrated edition appeared in 1571, with woodcuts by Bolognino Zaltieri. This edition contains a different set of woodcuts realised by Filippo Ferroverde under the direction of Pignoria for his 1615 edition. As the editor criticised Cartari for relying only on literary sources, he designed these new images to include reproductions of antiquarian objects, particularly intaglios, cameos, medals and reliefs. Pignoria s appendixes to Cartari s work (first published in 1615 and 1624) are permeated by the new 17th century interest in collecting antiques and exotic artefacts. The first two, Annotations and An addition illustrate a curious selection of true and real images of the gods : these are ancient finds, such as statues, coins, cameos and exotic objects, which belonged to Pignoria s collection, or that he could see in Padua, Rome and France. The third section, titled Images of the gods of the Indians , is the most innovative: extending the discussion to divinities from all over the world, it represents a step forward in the development of early modern ethnographical studies. Pignoria analyses the Aztec divinities of Mexico and Peru, remarkably depicting original idols brought from the New World and reproducing illustrations from the Codex Vaticanus 3738, one of the earliest testimonies of American art. Descriptions of Indian and Japanese gods e.g. the elephant-headed Ganesha, or Amida, a foreign god introduced to Japan by the Chinese Xaca are derived from Jesuit travel accounts, and many pages are dedicated to describing Japanese idols and statuettes. Interestingly, Pignoria believed that the inhabitants of the newly discovered regions conformed the way of manufacturing their idols to the images of Egyptian gods , and illustrates curious comparisons between American, Indian and Egyptian religious iconographies. Cartari s aim was to provide artists with a complete mythological-iconographic repertoire of Greek and Roman gods, heroes and allegories. Images of the gods begins with an introduction on the origins of religion and on the structure of the universe, whose spheres are well illustrated in a fold-out plate.

Our price: EUR 1.100,-- 

Cartari, Imagini Delli Dei De Gl'antichi.
Cartari, Imagini Delli Dei De Gl'antichi.
Cartari, Imagini Delli Dei De Gl'antichi.
Cartari, Imagini Delli Dei De Gl'antichi.
Cartari, Imagini Delli Dei De Gl'antichi.
Cartari, Imagini Delli Dei De Gl'antichi.
Cartari, Imagini Delli Dei De Gl'antichi.