Nicolaes Visscher

Biography
1618 - 16796 artworks for sale

About the artist

Nicolaes was the only son of Claes Jansz. Fisher. He is also known by the names: Nicolaas or Claes Claesz. After years of working for his father in the business, he succeeded him after his death in 1652. In 1662 he was admitted to the Amsterdam booksellers' guild and in 1677 Nicolaes, by now a respected publisher, received a 15-year patent from the states of Holland and West Friesland for the... Read more

Nicolaes was the only son of Claes Jansz. Fisher. He is also known by the names: Nicolaas or Claes Claesz. After years of working for his father in the business, he succeeded him after his death in 1652. In 1662 he was admitted to the Amsterdam booksellers' guild and in 1677 Nicolaes, by now a respected publisher, received a 15-year patent from the states of Holland and West Friesland for the printing and publishing of maps. He died two years later and was buried in the same chapel as his father.

Atlas editions of Nicolaes I included:

"Atlas Contractus Orbis Terrarum" from 1657.
“Germania Inferior” from 1663.
“Atlas Minor” from 1675.
Visscher's atlases were often compiled according to the wishes of the buyers (the so-called Atlas Contractus). They generally contain no text, only sometimes a printed index. Cards from other makers were used, self-engraved and worked copper plates from his father.

One of the highlights of seventeenth-century cartography is the multi-page wall map. An example of this - from 1656 - is the map of Zeeland: “Zelandiae Comitatus novissima Tabula”. This consisted of nine sheets that together had a size of 140 x 160 cm. By adding cityscapes, the map could be enlarged even further. These cityscapes were in turn published around 1668 under the name: “Speculum Zelandiae”.

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