Ornament with Cimone and Pero, two Tritons [Caritas Romana]

Reference: S13090
Author Hans Sebald BEHAM
Year: 1518 ca.
Measures: 99 x 38 mm
€900.00

Reference: S13090
Author Hans Sebald BEHAM
Year: 1518 ca.
Measures: 99 x 38 mm
€900.00

Description

Cimon and Pero; a roundel with Cimon kneeling at left, suckled by Pero at right; the medallion flanked by two Tritons among acanthus leaves and against a cross-hatched background.

Etching on iron, circa 1518/30, signed with monogram inside the medallion.

It depicts a characteristic episode of the classical Caritas Romana; Cimone, while waiting in jail to be executed, is breast-fed by his own daughter Pero.

The Caritas Romana is a story reported in Factorum et dictorum memorabilium libri IX by the Roman historian Valerius Maximus. This story takes place in Rome, during the Republican period, in the area between today's Church of St. Nicholas in Prison and the Theater of Marcellus. The story tells of a splendid example of a woman, Pero, who secretly nurses her father, Cimon, to prevent him from dying. Cimon was imprisoned and condemned to starve to death; his daughter Pero requested and was granted permission to visit him and stipulated that she would not bring her father anything to eat. Pero, who had recently given birth, secretly fed her father during her visits; she did so with the only food available: the milk from her breasts. All went well until the guards began to be suspicious; in fact, Cimon despite being very thin was still alive. One day a guard discovered Pero's gesture and reported it to his superiors, who were moved by that gesture of pietas (filial charity) and in his honor freed Cimon. The story of Pero and Cimon inspired a multitude of artists among whom the names of Caravaggio, Rubens and Veermer.

Shortly before 1520, some young artists in Albercht Dürer's circle took to making very small engravings that challenged the viewer with a miniature world of new secular subject matter and unconventional interpretations of traditional themes. Because of the small size of their engravings, these artists have long been affixed with the collective, and unflattering, name of Small Nuremberg Masters. The core of the group consists of three artists from Nuremberg, Hans Sebald & Bartel Beham and Georg Pencz, and in addition Jacob Bink from Cologne and Heinrich Aldegrever from Soest.

A very good impression, which shows only minor oxidation of the iron plate, printed on contemporary laid paper without watermark, with thin margins, in excellent condition.

Bibliografia

Pauli 1901-11, Hans Sebald Beham: Ein Kritisches Verzeichniss seiner Kupferstiche Radirungen und Holzschnitte (77); Hollstein, German engravings, etchings and woodcuts c.1400-1700 (77); Bartsch, Le Peintre graveur (VIII.145.73)

Hans Sebald BEHAM Nuremberg 1500 - Frankfurt 1550

Engraver, etcher, designer of woodcuts and stained glass, painter and illustrator. In contemporary documents and prints he was nearly always identified as Sebald Beham although since the 17th century (Sandrart) and into the early years of the 20th he has mistakenly been called Hans Sebald Beham on the basis of his monogram: HSP or HSB. This reflects S[ebald] Peham/Beham with the P (Nuremberg pronunciation) changing to B c. 1531, when he appears to have moved to Frankfurt. Sandrart’s biography of him is illustrated with a printed portrait similar to Sebald’s painted Self-portrait in his David panel in the Louvre; around the Sandrart portrait is an inscription identifying him as painter and engraver. Only one of Sebald’s panel paintings has survived (the Story of David, 1534; Paris, Louvre), though documents cited by Hampe and Vogler refer to him as a journeyman for painting in 1521 and as having his own journeyman—i.e. running a workshop—in 1525. Sebald is best known to posterity, however, for his prints, of which he produced a prodigious quantity: approximately 252 engravings, 18 etchings and 1500 woodcuts, including woodcut book illustrations. Biographical information is scanty: Sandrart alleged that he was trained by Barthel and opened a tavern, the bad reputation of which derived from his own dissolute life. Unquestionably, however, he was industrious and meticulous artistically. He began producing prints in quantity in 1519, though a few date to before then: a woodcut of Lust from a series of the Ten Commandments—a youthfully naive work produced in 1512 when Sebald was 12—and a sheet of sometimes awkwardly drawn pen-and-ink studies of male and female heads on red prepared paper (1518; Brunswick, Herzog Anton Ulrich-Mus.). His first engraving, dated 1518, is a diminutive Portrait of a Young Woman.

Hans Sebald BEHAM Nuremberg 1500 - Frankfurt 1550

Engraver, etcher, designer of woodcuts and stained glass, painter and illustrator. In contemporary documents and prints he was nearly always identified as Sebald Beham although since the 17th century (Sandrart) and into the early years of the 20th he has mistakenly been called Hans Sebald Beham on the basis of his monogram: HSP or HSB. This reflects S[ebald] Peham/Beham with the P (Nuremberg pronunciation) changing to B c. 1531, when he appears to have moved to Frankfurt. Sandrart’s biography of him is illustrated with a printed portrait similar to Sebald’s painted Self-portrait in his David panel in the Louvre; around the Sandrart portrait is an inscription identifying him as painter and engraver. Only one of Sebald’s panel paintings has survived (the Story of David, 1534; Paris, Louvre), though documents cited by Hampe and Vogler refer to him as a journeyman for painting in 1521 and as having his own journeyman—i.e. running a workshop—in 1525. Sebald is best known to posterity, however, for his prints, of which he produced a prodigious quantity: approximately 252 engravings, 18 etchings and 1500 woodcuts, including woodcut book illustrations. Biographical information is scanty: Sandrart alleged that he was trained by Barthel and opened a tavern, the bad reputation of which derived from his own dissolute life. Unquestionably, however, he was industrious and meticulous artistically. He began producing prints in quantity in 1519, though a few date to before then: a woodcut of Lust from a series of the Ten Commandments—a youthfully naive work produced in 1512 when Sebald was 12—and a sheet of sometimes awkwardly drawn pen-and-ink studies of male and female heads on red prepared paper (1518; Brunswick, Herzog Anton Ulrich-Mus.). His first engraving, dated 1518, is a diminutive Portrait of a Young Woman.