China Wholesale Oil Painting Reproductions No Minimum!

All RUBENS, Pieter Pauwel Oil Paintings

Flemish Baroque Era Painter, 1577-1640
 
 
RUBENS, Pieter Pauwel Christoffel Plantin oil painting reproduction


Christoffel Plantin
Oil on canvas Museum Plantin-Moretus, Antwerp Christoffel (Christophe) Plantin (1520-1589), French printer, founder of an important printing house and publisher of the Antwerp Polyglot Bible. Plantin learned bookbinding and bookselling at Caen, Normandy, and settled in 1549 as a bookbinder in Antwerp. A bad arm wound seems to have led him (about 1555) to turn to typography. His many publications were distinguished by their excellent typography, and he was original in using copper, instead of wood, engravings for book illustrations. His greatest venture, the Biblia regia, which would fix the original text of Old and New Testaments, was supported by Philip II of Spain in spite of clerical opposition and appeared in eight volumes during 1569-72. When Antwerp was plundered by the Spaniards in 1576 and Plantin had to pay a ransom, he established a branch office in Paris and then, in 1583, settled in Leiden as the typographer of the new university of the states of Holland, leaving his much-reduced business in Antwerp in the hands of his sons-in-law, John Moerentorf (Moretus) and Francis van Ravelinghen (Raphelengius). But in 1585 Plantin returned to Antwerp and Raphelengius took over the business in Leiden. After Plantin's death, the Antwerp business was carried on by Moretus, but it declined during the second half of the 17th century. All was religiously preserved, however, and in 1876 the city of Antwerp acquired the buildings and their contents and created the Plantin-Moretus Museum. Artist:RUBENS, Pieter Pauwel Title: Christoffel Plantin, 1601-1650, Flemish , painting , portrait
new22/RUBENS, Pieter Pauwel-887233.jpgPainting ID::  64613
 

 

 
   
      

RUBENS, Pieter Pauwel
  
Flemish Baroque Era Painter, 1577-1640
Christoffel Plantin
Oil on canvas Museum Plantin-Moretus, Antwerp Christoffel (Christophe) Plantin (1520-1589), French printer, founder of an important printing house and publisher of the Antwerp Polyglot Bible. Plantin learned bookbinding and bookselling at Caen, Normandy, and settled in 1549 as a bookbinder in Antwerp. A bad arm wound seems to have led him (about 1555) to turn to typography. His many publications were distinguished by their excellent typography, and he was original in using copper, instead of wood, engravings for book illustrations. His greatest venture, the Biblia regia, which would fix the original text of Old and New Testaments, was supported by Philip II of Spain in spite of clerical opposition and appeared in eight volumes during 1569-72. When Antwerp was plundered by the Spaniards in 1576 and Plantin had to pay a ransom, he established a branch office in Paris and then, in 1583, settled in Leiden as the typographer of the new university of the states of Holland, leaving his much-reduced business in Antwerp in the hands of his sons-in-law, John Moerentorf (Moretus) and Francis van Ravelinghen (Raphelengius). But in 1585 Plantin returned to Antwerp and Raphelengius took over the business in Leiden. After Plantin's death, the Antwerp business was carried on by Moretus, but it declined during the second half of the 17th century. All was religiously preserved, however, and in 1876 the city of Antwerp acquired the buildings and their contents and created the Plantin-Moretus Museum. Artist:RUBENS, Pieter Pauwel Title: Christoffel Plantin, 1601-1650, Flemish , painting , portrait

Related Paintings to RUBENS, Pieter Pauwel :.
| View of Paris from Montmartre | Donato Creti--Thetis Dipping the Infant Achilles into the Waters of the Styx | Nicolas Poussin -- Apotheosis of Saint Paul | Brouwer, Adriaen -- Boerenvechtpartij, 1620-1630 | Edgard Farasyn - Au coin du parc | | Henri d-Albret in the garden of the castle at Alencon | Julie Manet and her Greyhound, Laertes | European city landscape, street landsacpe, construction, frontstore, building and architecture.011 | Polittico di San Pietro | Mater Dolorosa |


        

 

 

 

CONTACT US
Contact us!