CAMILLO PROCACCINI (1555-1629)
THE SAM JOSEFOWITZ COLLECTION: A LIFETIME OF DISCOVERY AND SCHOLARSHIP
CAMILLO PROCACCINI (1555-1629)

The Transfiguration

Details
CAMILLO PROCACCINI (1555-1629)
The Transfiguration
etching
circa 1587-1595
on laid paper, watermark Pilgrim in Shield (similar to Woodward 9)
a very fine, atmospheric impression of this rare, large and important print
first state (of two)
printing with much plate tone and strong vertical wiping marks
trimmed to or on the platemark, with narrow to thread margins in places
generally in very good condition
Plate & Sheet 572 x 345 mm.
Provenance
Unidentified, an inscription in dark brown ink verso, probably 19th or early 20th century (not in Lugt).
Dr. Ture Lundh (1896-1983), Bergen, Norway (Lugt 6064); his anonymous sale, Christie's, London, Important Old Master Prints from a Private Collection, 26 June 1985, lot 237 (to Prouté).
With Paul Prouté, Paris.
Sam Josefowitz (1921-2015), Lithuania, Switzerland, USA and England (Lugt 6094); probably acquired from the above; then by descent to the present owners.
Literature
Bartsch 4

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Stefano Franceschi
Stefano Franceschi Specialist

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Lot Essay

Procaccini's etching of The Transfiguration is a reversed version of his own painting of the same subject, executed shortly after his arrival in Milan in 1587 for the church of San Fedele (today at the Borromeo Collection, Isola Bella). It was first mentioned by Lomazzo in 1590, the terminus ante quem for the completion of the painting; the etching was presumably created around the same time or shortly after.
The etching exists in two states. In the second state, the face of Christ has been strengthened and clearly defined by another etcher. This is a misunderstanding of Procaccini's intensions. Unlike all other figures in this composition, Procaccini drew the figure of Christ in its entirety with tiny flicks and strokes of the needle, the finest of which describe His hair and beard; the face itself is almost left blank. Procaccini was searching for a way of translating the luminosity of the painting, with the figure of Christ bathed in light, into the etching medium. In the end, he decided to let Christ, and in particular His face, all but disappear - an ethereal vision rather than a physical presence.

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