This hand-coloured aquatint print (above, right) is based on an oil painting by John Webber, an artist on James Cook鈥檚 third voyage to the South Seas, depicting a Maori settlement in聽Queen Charlotte Sound in 1777.
Taken from a lavishly illustrated book owned by the library of Victoria University of Wellington in聽New Zealand, it is currently on display alongside the original as part of an exhibition in the university鈥檚 Adam Art Gallery, State of the Art: Reproductive Prints from the Renaissance to Now (until 20 December).
The aim, says curator David Maskill, senior lecturer in art history at Victoria, is to explore 鈥渉ow and why original works of art have been copied鈥 and 鈥渢he nature and value of such reproductions鈥. In the case of the engraving by Giorgio Ghisi based on Michelangelo鈥檚 fresco The Last Judgement (above, left), 鈥測ou could argue that the print is more original than the fresco because it shows nude figures and reveals what the painting looked like before the Pope ordered the addition of clothing鈥.
Send suggestions for this series on the treasures, oddities and curiosities owned by universities across the world to matthew.reisz@tsleducation.com
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