細節
ATTRIBUÉ À ERASMUS QUELLINUS II (ANVERS 1607-1678)
Hylas enlevé par les nymphes, d'après Giulio Romano
pierre noire, plume et encre brune, lavis brun, rehaussé de blanc et de gouache jaune, sur papier beige
29,3 x 56,9 cm (11 ½ x 22 in.)
出版
C. van Hasselt, Dessins flamands du dix-septième siècle. Collection Frits Lugt. Institut néerlandais Paris, cat. exp., Londres, Victoria and Albert Museum, Paris, Institut néerlandais, Berne, musée des beaux-arts, Bruxelles, Bibliothèque Albert Ier, 1972, p. 99 et p. 100, note 11 (réplique retouchée par Rubens, dans l'édition anglaise du catalogue, p. 94, note 11).
M. Jaffé, Rubens and Italy, Oxford, 1977, pp. 43, 110, note 21 (comme par Sir Peter Paul Rubens).
J. Byam Shaw, The Italian Drawings of the Frits Lugt Collection, vol. I, Paris, 1992, p. 137, note 8, fig. 25.
J. Wood, Copies and adaptations from Raphael and his school, Londres et Turnhout, 2010, I, pp. 301, 304, II, p. 129, illustré (copie d'après Rubens, sans doute Erasmus Quellinus).
更多詳情
ATTRIBUTED TO E. QUELLINUS II, HYLAS CARRIED OFF BY THE NYMPHS, AFTER G. ROMANO, BLACK CHALK, PEN AND BROWN INK, BROWN WASH, HEIGHTENED WITH WHITE AND YELLOW, ON LIGHT BROWN PAPER
The drawing after Giulio Romano has been published four times and in three different ways. Carlos van Hasselt (1972) thought that Rubens was retouching a copy after Giulio Romano, while Michael Jaffé (1977) attributed it entirely to Rubens; James Byam Shaw (1992) followed Jaffé, while Jeremy Wood considered it to be a copy in the hand of Erasmus Quellinus. Quellinus left a small number of drawings after the Italian masters. A similar example of a Procession of Bacchus (probably after Pirro Ligorio) sold at Christie's in London on 2 July 1991, lot 201, supports Jeremy Wood's opinion and confirms this attribution to Quellinus.