Cristo e l’Adultera

Reference: S17203
Author Jacopo PALMA detto "Palma il Giovane"
Year: 1611 ca.
Measures: 145 x 205 mm
€575.00

Reference: S17203
Author Jacopo PALMA detto "Palma il Giovane"
Year: 1611 ca.
Measures: 145 x 205 mm
€575.00

Description

Christ and the woman taken in adultery, she is in the middle by Christ who is talking with an old man at left, other figures crowd the scene, set before a classical edifice.

Etching and engraving, 1611 circa, signed on plate. Lettered in upper centre 'Palma fece'.

Magnificent work, printed on contemporary laid paper with thin margins, in excellent condition.

From the "De excellentia et nobilitate delineationis libri duo", published in 1611. This model book, which provided images students could copy, was probably never intended that it be published as a bound compilation, the prints it contains are of very different subjects and sizes.

Belonging to an artistic family, Palma was immediately sent to be trained as a painter like his father’s uncle, Palma the Elder and his mother’s brother, Bonifacio de' Pitati. The influence of Raphael and Tintoretto was very strong during his training; he realized many copies after Titian, his real master, with whom he worked also on the famous painting La Pietà. He developed his artistic skills at the Venetian school and in Rome, where he lived for four years and came to know the Mannerism. His personal artistic production started in 1565.

From a graphic point of view, Palma owes his fortune to the publisher Giacomo Franco, son of Battista Franco. His graphic work is all collected in his De excellentia et nobilitate delineationis libri duo, 1611, published by Franco. The treatise includes some anatomic studies realized with etching and engraving carved by Jacopo Palma and, in the second book, studies of cameos, reliefs, old style decorations, engraved by Battista Franco and probably revised by his son.

Literature

Bartsch XVI.292.20; S. Mason Rinaldi, Palma il Giovane. L'opera completa, pp. 46, 58, 101, 105. Dimensioni 168x110

Jacopo PALMA detto "Palma il Giovane" (Venezia 1544 -1628)

Venetian painter and etcher; great-nephew of Jacopo Palma I, called Palma Vecchio. The influence of Raphael and Tintoretto was very strong during his training; he realized many copies after Titian, his real master, with whom he worked also on the famous painting La Pietà. He developed his artistic skills at the Venetian school and in Rome, where he lived for four years and came to know the Mannerism. His personal artistic production started in 1565.From a graphic point of view, Palma owes his fortune to the publisher Giacomo Franco, son of Battista Franco. His graphic work is all collected in his De excellentia et nobilitate delineationis libri duo, 1611, published by Franco. The treatise includes some anatomic studies realized with etching and engraving carved by Jacopo Palma and, in the second book, studies of cameos, reliefs, old style decorations, engraved by Battista Franco and probably revised by his son.

Literature

Bartsch XVI.292.20; S. Mason Rinaldi, Palma il Giovane. L'opera completa, pp. 46, 58, 101, 105. Dimensioni 168x110

Jacopo PALMA detto "Palma il Giovane" (Venezia 1544 -1628)

Venetian painter and etcher; great-nephew of Jacopo Palma I, called Palma Vecchio. The influence of Raphael and Tintoretto was very strong during his training; he realized many copies after Titian, his real master, with whom he worked also on the famous painting La Pietà. He developed his artistic skills at the Venetian school and in Rome, where he lived for four years and came to know the Mannerism. His personal artistic production started in 1565.From a graphic point of view, Palma owes his fortune to the publisher Giacomo Franco, son of Battista Franco. His graphic work is all collected in his De excellentia et nobilitate delineationis libri duo, 1611, published by Franco. The treatise includes some anatomic studies realized with etching and engraving carved by Jacopo Palma and, in the second book, studies of cameos, reliefs, old style decorations, engraved by Battista Franco and probably revised by his son.