![]() click to enlarge |
|
| Image | 1733-Paris-David-01-006 |
| Illustration No. | 1   |
| Illustrator | Charles-Antoine Coypel (copied after by Bonard) |
| Engraver | Mathey |
| Lithographer | |
| Title Caption | |
| Title Supplied | Don Quixote's first sally |
| Part | Part I, Madrid 1605 |
| Chapter | Chapter 2 |
| Subject |
2.1 First sally |
| Illustration Type |
Chapter illustration |
| Technique |
Burin engraving |
| Color | Black and white |
| Volume | I |
| Page Number | f.p. 11 |
| Image Dimension | 125 x 71 |
| Page Dimension | 168 x 100 |
| Commentary | Allegorical representation of Don Quixote's first sally.
Don Quixote, mounted on Rocinante, leaves his house accompanied by Love (Cupid), who touches his heart with a torch, and Folly, who holds a jester scepter, wears a barber basin with feathers (symbol of madness) and points to a windmill half-transformed into a giant (8:1), a flock of sheep (18:1) and Dulcinea carrying wheat (31:1). Drawing and engraving are acceptable. |
| Notes | 1 - Same plate first engraved for Paris: Compagnie des Libraires, 1732.
2 - Turned copy with a new vertical format after Coypel’s illustration (Paris: Surugue, c. 1724). |