“A MAGNIFICENT WORK”: PICART’S ILLUSTRATED METAMORPHOSES, 1732
OVID. Ovid’s Metamorphoses in Latin and English, Translated by the Most Eminent Hands. Amsterdam: for the Westeins and Smith, 1732. Two volumes in one. Large folio (12 by 18-1/2 inches), contemporary full brown calf rebacked and recornered, elaborately gilt-decorated spine, raised bands.
First English issue of Bernard Picart’s illustrated Metamorphoses, with lovely engraved frontispiece and 130 fine half-page copper engravings.
Ovid’s Metamorphoses stands as “one of the most influential works in Western literature. It is at once a comprehensive account of Latin mythology and a feat of fictional construction which taught innumerable later writers, among them Chaucer and Dante” (Clute & Grant, 739). This beautifully and copiously illustrated edition boasts 130 engravings by J. Schenk, Philippa Gunst, J. Folkema, I. Wandelar and others after designs by Bernard Picart and his studio. “Picart was the outstanding professional illustrator of the first third of the 18th century… He worked for the most part in the fading baroque tradition, but there are elements in his production which herald the new age” (Ray, The Art of the French Illustrated Book, 7). “Beautiful edition, sought for the engravings that adorn it” (Brunet IV: 285). “A very magnificent work” (Brueggemann, 624). Text handsomely printed in two columns, with Latin verse and English translation side-by-side. This English translation—rendered into verse anonymously by Dryden, Addison, Congreve, Rowe, Gay and others—first appeared in 1717, accompanied by different illustrations. With half title, separate engraved title pages printed in red and black, and numerous woodcut headpieces and initials. Published the same year as separate editions in French and Dutch. Pencil bibliographic notation to front pastedown.
Scattered light foxing, occasional light marginal dampstaining. Light age-wear to handsome contemporary calf. An excellent copy of this splendidly illustrated classic.