Property of
A NEW ENGLAND FAMILY
WILLIAM BLAKE
细节
WILLIAM BLAKE
The Circle of Thieves: Agnolo Brunelleschi Attacked by a Six-Footed Serpent, plate IV from Illustrations to Dante's Divine Comedy (not in Essick; Bindman 650)
engraving, 1827, on laid India, presumably from a Linnell edition, with margins, an unobtrusive vertical printer's crease, pale light-staining, a foxmark just beyond the top edge of the India sheet, other very minor defects in the support sheet, otherwise in good condition, framed; and Chaucer's Canterbury Pilgrims (E. XVI; B. 477)--engraving, 1810, on cream wove paper, Essick's late fourth state (of five), with parts of the faint drypoint inscription just visible, with margins, pale staining and an occasional foxmark, an unobtrusive tear extending two inches into the image at top, laid down on wove paper, taped to the overmat with masking tape at the margin edges, framed (2)
The Circle of Thieves: Agnolo Brunelleschi Attacked by a Six-Footed Serpent, plate IV from Illustrations to Dante's Divine Comedy (not in Essick; Bindman 650)
engraving, 1827, on laid India, presumably from a Linnell edition, with margins, an unobtrusive vertical printer's crease, pale light-staining, a foxmark just beyond the top edge of the India sheet, other very minor defects in the support sheet, otherwise in good condition, framed; and Chaucer's Canterbury Pilgrims (E. XVI; B. 477)--engraving, 1810, on cream wove paper, Essick's late fourth state (of five), with parts of the faint drypoint inscription just visible, with margins, pale staining and an occasional foxmark, an unobtrusive tear extending two inches into the image at top, laid down on wove paper, taped to the overmat with masking tape at the margin edges, framed (2)