Saturday, June 25, 2016

Jacopo Caraglio's Pagan Divinities in Niches, 1526

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso Fiorentino
Diana
1526
engraving
British Museum

Jacopo Caraglio (ca. 1500-1565) worked in Rome alongside Marcantonio Raimondi (1480-1534) and others in the group of printmakers and artists who had assembled around Raphael before his early death in 1520. For this series of classical gods and goddesses Caraglio collaborated with Rosso Fiorentino (1495-1540) who made the original drawings for Caraglio to etch. British Museum curators explain that three versions of this series of Pagan Divinities were printed, with differing levels of shading in the niches and borders. Examples from all three versions are intermingled here. Twenty different images were originally produced. Facsimiles were also later made by other artists and reprinted from new plates. Scholars credit this set of prints  and a couple of other similar sets by Caraglio  as important forces in spreading the new elongated Italian Mannerist style across Europe.

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso Fiorentino
Hercules
1526
engraving
British Museum

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso Fiorentino
Neptune
1526
engraving
British Museum

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso Fiorentino
Hebe
1526
engraving
British Museum

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso Fiorentino
Apollo
1526
engraving
British Museum

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso Fiorentino
Ariadne
1526
engraving
British Museum

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso Fiorentino
Bacchus
1526
engraving
British Museum

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso Fiorentino
Juno
1526
engraving
British Museum

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso Fiorentino
Mercury
1526
engraving
British Museum

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso Fiorentino
Ceres
1526
engraving
British Museum

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso Fiorentino
Mars
1526
engraving
British Museum

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso Fiorentino
Venus
1526
engraving
British Museum

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso FiorentinoVulcan
1526
engraving
British Museum

Jacopo Caraglio after Rosso Fiorentino
Pluto
1526
engraving
British Museum