Anton Ignace, (Ignaz), Melling was born in
Karlsruhe in 1763. After the death of his sculptor father, Antoine lived with his painter uncle in
Strassbourg (
Lorraine). As a young man he visited his older brother, and studied Architecture and Mathematics at
Klagenfurt University. At the age of 19, he went to Italy, Egypt, and finally
Constantinople, (
Istanbul) - as a member of the
Russian Ambassador's retinue and household - drawing pictures for various dignitaries. He was introduced to princess Hatice, the sister and confidant of the
Ottoman Sultan Selim III.
At the Hatice Sultana's suggestion, Melling was employed in the position of Imperial Architect to Selim III. In 1795 the princess commissioned Melling to design a
labyrinth for her palace at Ortakeï - in the style Danish ambassador Baron Hübsch's garden. Delighted with the result, she then asked Melling to redecorate the palace interior, and subsequently, a completely new neoclassical palace at Defterdarburnu. He also designed clothes and
jewellery for her.
Melling
Pasha's eighteen years as Imperial Architect gave him a privileged opportunity to observe the Ottoman Court - being more familiar with the Ottoman palace than any Western artist since
Gentile Bellini. He made many detailed drawings of the Sultan's palaces, Ottoman society, and Istanbul and
vendute of its environs – rightly known as "the unrivalled painter of the Bosphorus". As stated in an anonymous travelogue written in about 1817, "Sometimes these pictures contain an excessive amount of detail in an endeavour to reflect the reality but they depict the modern buildings and landscapes of this city, every view of which is attractive, in a manner more successful than that achieved in the most sensitive written descriptions" - in a far more realistic manner than the work of
Matthäus Merian (1593-1650). Merian’s panorama engraving of Istanbul, published in 1653 and extensively reprinted, whilst claiming to represent a view of Istanbul from the heights of Galata and Beyoglu, depicts Istanbul as a City consisting only of minarets.