Print Quarterly, March 2026
The long eighteenth century in the latest issue of Print Quarterly:
Print Quarterly 43.1 (March 2026)
a r t i c l e s

Conrad Martin Metz, Frontispiece, from Imitations of Ancient and Modern Drawings Engraved and Published by C. M. Metz, 1789, etching and aquatint printed in colour, 360 × 256 mm (London, British Museum).
• Elania Pieragostini, “Conrad Martin Metz and his Imitations of Ancient and Modern Drawings,” pp. 14–26. This article examines the origins, development, and targeted audience of Conrad Martin Metz’s (1749–1827) decade-long project to reproduce drawings held in British collections, aiming to show how art developed over time, starting from Cimabue. Its programmatic introduction addresses key issues such as the disegno–colore debate, the preference for preliminary sketches and the differences between originals and copies. The author summarizes the various collections accessed by Metz, the techniques used to replicate the effects of drawn media, and his business operations and clientele. The project is further discussed in relation to similar print projects of the time.
• Dominika Cora, “New Facts about Russia’s Imperial Portrait Series, 1745–77,” pp. 36–43. This shorter notice discusses the chronology and publication of Johann Stenglin’s (1710/15–76) mezzotints depicting Russian emperors, one of his earliest commissions. The two appendices show how the prints were once believed to be published in six ‘sets’, and how they are organized now in accordance with the new research. The new findings also allow for the correct attribution of the monogram ‘AST’ found on the portraits of Peter the Great, Anna Petrovna, and Catherine I.
n o t e s a n d r e v i e w s
• Armin Kunz, Review of Bryony Bartlett-Rawlings and Naomi Lebens, eds., Placing Prints: New Developments in the Study of Print, 1400–1800 (Brill, 2025), pp. 44–47. Includes an essay by Donato Esposito on Joshua Reynolds’s print collection.
• Andrew Robison, Review of Felix Reuße, Hans Hubert, and Viktoria Gont, eds., Giovanni Battista Piranesi: Vedute di Roma (Städtische Museen Freiburg and Michael Imhof, 2024), pp. 63–65.
• Ellis Tinios, Review of Andreas Marks, Hiroshige’s One Hundred Famous Views of Edo: The Definitive Collector’s Edition (Tuttle Publishing, 2024), pp. 65–67.
• Gervase Rosser, Review of Erin Giffin, Early Modern Replicas of the Holy House of Loreto: Translating Space (Routledge, 2025), pp. 83–86.
• Ellis Tinios, Review of John Fiorillo, Hokuei: Master of Osaka Kabuki Prints (Ludion, 2024), pp. 86–89.
o b i t u a r y
David Bindman (1940–2025), pp. 76–77.



















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