Christ and theSamaritan woman

Reference: S12448
Author Francesco BRIZIO
Year: 1595
Measures: 412 x 286 mm
€900.00

Reference: S12448
Author Francesco BRIZIO
Year: 1595
Measures: 412 x 286 mm
€900.00

Description

Etching, 1595 circa, with Annibale Carracci's signature on lower left.

Example in the fourth, final state. Good impression, printed on contemporary laid paper, irregularly trimmed to platemark, signs of central fold, otherwise in good condition.

Previously ascribed to Carracci and Guido Reni. Dimensiosi 412x286

Francesco BRIZIO (Bologna 1574 - 1623)

Italian painter, draughtsman and engraver. He studied with Bartolomeo Passerotti and afterwards at the Accademia degli Incamminati, founded by the Carracci, where he participated in group projects supervised by Ludovico Carracci. These included frescoes (c. 1598–1600) in the Palazzo Fava in Bologna depicting scenes from the Aeneid (he very likely worked on the last room, in collaboration with Leonello Spada); decorations (c. 1600) in the oratory of S Maria dell’Orazione annexed to the oratory of S Colombano, Bologna (Road to Calvary); and others (1604–05; almost invisible) in the octagonal cloister of the monastery of S Michele in Bosco, Bologna (Three Stories of St Benedict). He was left in charge of the workshop while Ludovico made a brief visit to Rome in 1602, suggesting that he held a prestigious position (although the best pupils had by then already left). Brizio continued to work with Leonello Spada and Lucio Massari, more gifted painters whose work has elements in common with his. They collaborated on frescoes in the Palazzo Bonfioli–Rossi in Bologna (1604–5) and the oratory of the Trinity at Pieve di Cento (c. 1605). His loyalty to Ludovico Carracci’s style is evident in numerous altarpieces that remain in Bolognese churches, such as S Domenico, S Martino and S Salvatore, and in paintings in the Pinacoteca Nazionale, Bologna, and the Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan. Malvasia praised his ability to organize large-scale compositions with many figures, as in the Coronation of the Virgin of St Luke (1618; Bologna, S Petronio). Not a highly gifted painter, but noted for his witty narratives, he occupied a secondary role in the figurative Bolognese tradition. His work as a draughtsman and engraver is also noteworthy

Francesco BRIZIO (Bologna 1574 - 1623)

Italian painter, draughtsman and engraver. He studied with Bartolomeo Passerotti and afterwards at the Accademia degli Incamminati, founded by the Carracci, where he participated in group projects supervised by Ludovico Carracci. These included frescoes (c. 1598–1600) in the Palazzo Fava in Bologna depicting scenes from the Aeneid (he very likely worked on the last room, in collaboration with Leonello Spada); decorations (c. 1600) in the oratory of S Maria dell’Orazione annexed to the oratory of S Colombano, Bologna (Road to Calvary); and others (1604–05; almost invisible) in the octagonal cloister of the monastery of S Michele in Bosco, Bologna (Three Stories of St Benedict). He was left in charge of the workshop while Ludovico made a brief visit to Rome in 1602, suggesting that he held a prestigious position (although the best pupils had by then already left). Brizio continued to work with Leonello Spada and Lucio Massari, more gifted painters whose work has elements in common with his. They collaborated on frescoes in the Palazzo Bonfioli–Rossi in Bologna (1604–5) and the oratory of the Trinity at Pieve di Cento (c. 1605). His loyalty to Ludovico Carracci’s style is evident in numerous altarpieces that remain in Bolognese churches, such as S Domenico, S Martino and S Salvatore, and in paintings in the Pinacoteca Nazionale, Bologna, and the Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan. Malvasia praised his ability to organize large-scale compositions with many figures, as in the Coronation of the Virgin of St Luke (1618; Bologna, S Petronio). Not a highly gifted painter, but noted for his witty narratives, he occupied a secondary role in the figurative Bolognese tradition. His work as a draughtsman and engraver is also noteworthy