Cesare Antonio Accius
Cesare Antonio Accius (or Accer)[1] was an Italian engraver working in the early 17th century. According to William Young Ottley, writing in 1831, his work was known from a single print, showing a mountainous landscape, with a chapel, a large house and three figures, one of which is beating a drum. The artist signed it "Cesare Antoni Accius, fecit, inv. A.D. 1609.".[2]
The Yale University Art Gallery has an impression of a print answering this description under the title Landscape with Men Stealing Waterfowl.[3]
References
[edit]- ^ Bryan 1886
- ^ Ottley 1831
- ^ "Landscape with Men Stealing Waterfowl". artgallery.yale.edu.
Sources
[edit]- Bryan, Michael (1886). Robert Edmund Graves (ed.). Dictionary of Painters and Engravers, Biographical and Critical. Vol. II L-Z. London: George Bell and Sons. p. 4.
- Ottley, William Young (1831). "Caesar Antonius Accius". Notices of Engravers, and Their Works. London. p. 17.