Deaf, dumb & brilliant : Johannes Thopas, master draughtsman / Rudi Ekkart.

  • Ekkart, Rudolf E. O.
Date:
2014
  • Books

About this work

Also known as

Deaf, dumb and brilliant
Johannes Thopas, master draughtsman

Description

Introduces the work of the seventeenth-century Dutch portrait draughtsman to a wider audience.

Until recently, the Dutch draughtsman Johannes Thopas, who was born deaf in 1626, was only known to a small group of connoisseurs, dealers and collectors. However, his remarkable, subtle and technically refined portrait drawings on parchment deserve a wider audience. This handsome publication, the first devoted to his work, will prove to be an eye opener for many art lovers. Beginning with his earliest works (two beautiful miniatures of 1646 in the Fundation Custodia in Paris), Thopas produced incredibly refined drawings, usually with lead point on parchment. Apart from lead-point drawings, Thopas made several drawings in colour, on parchment and on Japanese paper. In most cases these drawings were done after life. Furthermore, he produced at least one brilliant copy after a painting by Cornelis Cornelisz van Haarlem, Venus, Mars and Cupid, and even a painting, portraying a dead child. He must have made more paintings and certainly more drawings than the seventy we know today (all of which are catalogued and illustrated here). In this exhibition his only known painting and the one mythological drawing are shown and accompanied by thirty of his most beautiful portraits, from private collections in the US, Canada, United Kingdom and the Netherlands, as well as museums, such as the Albertina in Vienna, the Amsterdam Rijksmuseum, the Städel in Frankfurt and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

Publication/Creation

London : Paul Holberton Publishing, 2014.

Physical description

200 pages : illustrations (some colour), portraits ; 26 cm

Bibliographic information

Includes bibliographical references.

Notes

Catalogue of the exhibition at Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum, Aachen, Germany (13 March - 22 June 2014) and the Rembrandt House Museum, Amsterdam, The Netherlands (12 July - 5 October 2014).

Language note

In English; essays also in Dutch and German.

Where to find it

  • LocationStatus
    History of Medicine
    ZH.381.AA6
    Open shelves

Permanent link

Identifiers

ISBN

  • 9781907372674
  • 1907372679