UGO DA CARPI (ACTIVE 1502-32) AFTER MARCANTONIO RAIMONDI (1480-1534) AFTER RAPHAEL (1483-1520)
PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE NORWEGIAN COLLECTION
UGO DA CARPI (ACTIVE 1502-32) AFTER MARCANTONIO RAIMONDI (1480-1534) AFTER RAPHAEL (1483-1520)

David and Goliath

Details
UGO DA CARPI (ACTIVE 1502-32) AFTER MARCANTONIO RAIMONDI (1480-1534) AFTER RAPHAEL (1483-1520)
David and Goliath
chiaroscuro woodcut printed from three blocks in black and two shades of green, circa 1520-27, on laid paper, without watermark, a good impression of this rare print, third state (of five), with narrow margins on three sides, trimmed to or just outside the borderline above, several repaired tears, the sheet thinly backed
Block 262 x 382 mm.
Sheet 266 x 391 mm.
Provenance
With Jan Johnson, Montreal.
Acquired from the above in 2001; then by descent to the present owner.
Literature
Bartsch 8; see Takahatake 19; see Fondazione Cini ALU.0945.1

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Stefano Franceschi
Stefano Franceschi Specialist

Lot Essay

As the initiator of chiaroscuro woodcut printing in Italy, Ugo da Carpi was one of the most influencial Italian printmakers of the early 16th century. For over a decade, beginning his career in Venice, then moving to Rome and finally to Bologna, he worked with some of the most acclaimed artists and workshops of his time, such as Titian, Raphael and Parmigianino, thus contributing to the dissemination and development of the technique across the Italian Peninsula.
The present print, created by Ugo in Rome, is based on Marcantonio's engraving (B. 10) after Raphael's fresco in the Loggia Vaticana, depicting the David about to behead the defeated giant Goliath on the battlefield, surrounded by the Isrealite and the Philistine troops still engaged in fierce fighting.
The matte palette of the present impression may suggest that Ugo printed it slightly later, in Parmigianino's workshop in Bologna between 1527 and 1530. Ugo had brought his Roman woodblocks with him to Bologna, where he reprinted some impressions while creating his Diogenes and working with his pupil Antonio da Trento (see following lots).

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