LOGGAN
(David) Oxonia Illustrata, sive Omnium Celeberrimae istius
Universitatis Collegiorum, Aularum, Bibliothecae Bodleianae,
Scholarum Publicarum, Theatri Sheldoniani; ne non Urbis Totius
Scenographia.
LOGGAN (David)
Oxonia Illustrata, sive Omnium Celeberrimae istius Universitatis
Collegiorum, Aularum, Bibliothecae Bodleianae, Scholarum
Publicarum, Theatri Sheldoniani; ne non Urbis Totius Scenographia.
Oxford: e Theatro Sheldoniano [actually L. Lichfield]. 1675,
entirely engraved on copper, consisting of titlepage, royal
privilege, dedication to Charles II, preface, 40 plates (11
topographical, including the fine bird's-eye view of the city, 1
costume, 28 colleges and halls) of perspective views (all of which
are double-sheet except Christ Church, which is on three), folio,
(438x310mm ) with central fold an American lady disliked one as her
copies did not have this . . . it was a giclee' print ie compueter
copy!.
Loggan is the
earliest and best collection of Oxford viewsalthough almost
contemporary to Guillelimus Williams Kip and the Almanacks. The
accurate detail implies considerable time spent on the study of the
buildings and on the preparation of the plates. The Oxford views,
as the Introduction tells us, had been 'long expected, and begun
several years before' [diu expectatum Opus, annis abhinc aliquot
susceptum']. Wood refers to the plates as early as 1665, which is
the date that Loggan lived at Nuffield in Oxfordshire, and the
possible date that he started work on the views. He mentions them
again in 1669, when Loggan was able to exhibit many of the plates
as finished. Wood clearly expected that the sheets would have been
ready in 1674 to be bound with his Historia et Antiquitates, by
those that wished it. He both disclaimed responsibility for the
captions to the plates in his introduction to the reader, and
several times elsewhere referred to them as 'the cuts belonging to
my book'. This, and the fact that Loggan's Index refers to Wood,
relating the illustration to the place where a history of the
building can be found, provides clear evidence of an intention that
Wood's history and Loggan's views should appear together. Why they
didn't is unclear, because it seems that they were ready. Fell had
written, on Jan. 19th, 1674/5, that the plates were 'in a manner
quite finished'. It may be that the tensions which had arisen
between Fell and Wood over the editing of Historia et Antiquitates
hold the key to this puzzle. The plates were not printed at the
Sheldonian, but at Leonard Lichfield's house in Holywell, where it
is presumed that the rolling press was housed. (Madan.)
Biography David Loggan, (b
Danzig [now Gdansk], bapt 27
Aug 1634; d London, bur 1 Aug 1692). British engraver, draughtsman
and painter.He married in 1663 and moved two years later to
Nuffield, Oxon, to avoid the plague. He was living in Oxford by
1669, when he was appointed 'public sculptor' to the university. He
then proceeded to draw and engrave all the Oxford colleges in
bird's-eye views for his famous folio Oxonia illustrata ,
published in 1675, the year that he was made a British
citizen.
The book appeared in two editions which included :- Engraved
title-page, index of plates, privilege leaf, dedication to Charles
II, preface leaf, double-page plan of Oxford and 39
copper-engraved views, 1 folding, 38 double-page. The rarer second
edition was printed, unusually, on thicker paper,. The plates in
the second edition are easily recognised by the addition of a plate
number in the bottom right-hand corner. Otherwise they are
unchanged from the first edition, and the strength of the
impression is indicative of the comparatively small number of
copies printed in 1675 That year he once again settled in London,
living in Leicester Fields, where he let rooms to aristocratic
patrons, notably Sir Thomas Isham, and acted as their agent in the
acquisition of works of art. From 1676 he was involved in preparing
the folio Cantabrigia illustrata, and in 1690, the
year it
was published, he was made engraver to Cambridge University.:::
I
do though buy Loggan's whenever
available and can always put anyone upon a waiting list .. normally
only a few plates are available at any sale as we NEVER break
books. . they
include as per table
in the book :-linked blue
All pages
show a stock image then will
time allowing show the particular copy available for sale. Scans/
digital photo's taken from the base of the print as this is where
damage occurs all are full page NOT trimmed or cleaned in any way
nromally as I try to take a warts and all pic then the actual item
is about 60% better