1 / 8

Description

Veen, Otto van - The four morals of human life, in one hundred emblems; with the enchiridion of epictetus, and the table of Cebes, Platonic philosopher. - Antwerp - Widow of Henri Verdussen - 1733 - 36.5 cm - hardcover Number of pieces: 1 Pages: [20] + 207 + [1] + [1] + 27 + [8] + 50 + [1] + [1] pp. -

Automatically translated by DeepL. The original version is the only legally valid version.
To see the original version, click here.

167 
Go to lot
<
>

Veen, Otto van

Estimate 590 - 800 USD
Starting price 540 USD

* Not including buyer’s premium.
Please read the conditions of sale for more information.

Sale fees: 20 %
Leave an absentee bid

For sale on Thursday 29 Aug - 19:00 (COT)
bogota, Colombia
Bogota Auctions
+576017216666
Browse the catalogue Sales terms Sale info

You may also like

VAN VEEN, Otto. Les emblemes de l'amour humain du Sieur Otho Venius. In Brusselles, chez Francois Foppens, 1667 4to oblong. 159x200 mm. Half vellum binding and hardback. Pages 16 unnumbered, including Frontispiece, 247, 1 unnumbered. Page 247 badly numbered 747. Vignette to Frontispiece with portrait of Ovid, a large figure showing Venus in her chariot, and 124 oval figures, all copper-engraved. Two Ex-libris pasted to the counterplate, Handwritten dedication to the first guard sheet with date '1914'. Diffuse traces of use, genuine specimen. Rare edition given by François Foppens in Brussels. The plates are engraved by Corneille Boel on Van Veen's original drawings. The images are very curious: one emblem, on page 21, shows a gladiator slaying a dragon; another Cupid is burned at the stake; in another, Cupid fights with soldiers. Like the first Antwerp edition of 1608, the work contains Latin, Italian and French verses. In the notice to the reader, the publisher explains that he has acquired the original books and branches of Van Veen's works, whose titles and number of engravings he lists, and has decided to republish them. Otto Vaenius, 1556-1629, or Van Veen, 1556-1629, Latinized Otto Vaenius, was one of Rubens' masters. Adams, Rawles, Saunders, A Bibliography of French Emblem Books of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, II, F-593-594, 544-555. Oblong 4to. 159x200 mm. Quarter vellum and hardcover binding. Pages [16, including Title-page], 247, [1]. Page 247 badly numbered 747. Vignette with portrait of Ovid on the Title-page, a large figure showing Venus on his chariot and 124 oval figures, all engraved on copper. Two Ex-libris glued to the inside cover, Handwritten dedication to the first endpaper dated '1914'. Widespread traces of wear, unsophisticated copy. Rare edition given by François Foppens in Brussels. The plates are engraved by Corneille Boel on the original drawings by Van Veen. The images are very curious, all with Cupid as the protagonist: one emblem [p21], shows a gladiator killing a dragon; another Cupid being burned at the stake; another Cupid fighting with soldiers. Like the first edition of Antwerp, from 1608, the work contains Latin, Italian and French verses. In the news to the reader, the publisher explains that he has purchased the books and the original printing blocks of Van Veen's works, of which he reports titles and number of engravings, and that he has decided to republish them. Otto Vaenius, 1556-1629, or Van Veen, 1556-1629, Latinized Otto Vaenius, was one of Rubens' masters.