William Long, 'Study for part of one of the Ceilings of the Vatican' after a drawing attributed to Raffaello Sanziolong

'Study for part of one of the Ceilings of the Vatican' after a drawing attributed to Raffaello Sanziolong, 1823

William Long

RA Collection: Art

The Italian school of Design is a collection of facsimile reproductions of eighty-four drawings engraved from the original drawings owned by the amateur artist and collector William Young Ottley (1771-1836).

After his studies at the Royal Academy of Art, William Y. Ottley travelled to Italy where he over the years he amassed a matchless collection of Renaissance drawings. On his return he started to developed his ambitious plan As described in the 'Preface', he intended to publish 'a chronological sequence of the designs of the most eminent artists of Italy', recording not only the rise of Italian art from Cimabue to Michelangelo, but also its decline. The work, commencing in 1808 or 1809, was originally issued in parts, but only in 1823, all the three parts were gathered and reissued as a single volume. The original plan was eventually not brought to completion having included works of artists such Claude Lorraine, and Nicholas Poussin. However his approach to the art history was truly visionary with unmatched artistic and historical vision. Ottley's interest in the still-unfashionable early Renaissance artist (the then called, 'Primitives') would have played an essential role in inspiring the Pre-Raphaelite. It is also believed that while in Italy Ottley made friends at Rome with John Flaxman who certainly had a part in focusing the younger man's taste and his pioneering appreciation for early Italian art.

The volume is also notable not just for its critical insight, but for the excellent execution of the plates. The team of engravers employed a vast variety of specialist intaglio techniques. Ranging from aquatint to stipple engraving, soft ground etching, black chalk manner, red chalk manner, and crayon manner, these technique responded to the media and the style of each drawing. This made 'one of the most sumptuous books on the fine arts ever produced’.

During the long gestation of the Italian School of Design, Ottley found a further outlet for his ever-developing connoisseurship in the study of early Italian prints. These efforts resulted in another seminal publication An Inquiry into the Origin and Early History of Engraving on Copper and Wood (1816). Later on Ottley reverted to a new project, the Series of Plates of the Florentine school, a collection of reproductions of the major works - frescos and sculptures - of the early Renaissance in Florence. The volume was published in 1826 and dedicated to his friend John Flaxman.

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Object details

Title
'Study for part of one of the Ceilings of the Vatican' after a drawing attributed to Raffaello Sanziolong
Engraved by
Previous owner
William Young Ottley (1771 - 1836)
Donor
William Young Ottley (1771 - 1836)
Compiled by
William Young Ottley (1771 - 1836)
Published by
James Augustus Hessey (fl. 1806-1831) and John Taylor (before 1806 - 1853)
Printed by
John McCreery (1768 - 1832)
Dedicatee
Original attributed to
Raphael (1483 - 1520)
Date
1823
Object type
Plate
Place of Publication
London
Medium
Etching and aquatint in colour on j. whatman wove paper
Dimensions

372 mm x 344 mm

Collection
Royal Academy of Arts
Object number
17/4060
This image is from a book

The Italian School Of Design: Being A Series Of Fac-Similes Of Original Drawings, By The Most Eminent Painters And Sculptors Of Italy; With Biographical Notices Of The Artists, And Observations On Their Works. By William Young Ottley. - London:: 1823.

Click here to view the book

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