William Blake

Ciampolo the Barrator Tormented by the Devils

1826–7, reprinted 1968

In Tate Britain

Prints and Drawings Room

View by appointment
Artist
William Blake 1757–1827
Medium
Line-engraving on paper
Dimensions
Image: 238 × 335 mm
Collection
Tate
Acquisition
Presented by Lessing J. Rosenwald 1975
Reference
T01951

Catalogue entry

T01951 Illustrations to Dante's ‘Divine Comedy’: Restrikes 1826–7/1968 [A00005-A00011; N03351-N03370; T01950-T01956; complete]

T 01950–6 /-
Seven line-engravings on Japanese paper 383×459 (15 7/8×18 1/16)
Inscribed in pencil below each print, ‘A restrike from the copper plate in my collection. August 1968 Lessing J. Rosenwald’ b.r. within platemark, and 2/25 hoehn imp 68' b.r. outside platemark.
Presented by Lessing J. Rosenwald 1975
PROVENANCE Commissioned by Lessing J. Rosenwald 1968
LITERATURE As for A00005-A00011; Bentley Blake Books 1977, p.545, no.448D

T01950-T01956 are restrikes made in 1968 from Blake's original plates in the Rosenwald collection, now in the National Gallery of Art, Washington. They were printed by Harry Hoehn for Lessing J. Rosenwald at the suggestion of Ruthven Todd. The edition was of twenty-five sets. In 1955 Mr Rosenwald had had another, less successful set of restrikes pulled, also in an edition of twenty-five.

T01951 Ciampolo the Barrator Tormented by the Devils

Engraving, 238×335 (9 1/4×13 1/8); platemark 278×354 (10 1/8×13 15/16)
Inferno XXII, 31–42, 70–72.


Published in:
Martin Butlin, William Blake 1757-1827, Tate Gallery Collections, V, London 1990

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