RAIMONDI, Marcantonio - b. ~1480 Bologna, d. ~1534 Bologna - WGA

RAIMONDI, Marcantonio

(b. ~1480 Bologna, d. ~1534 Bologna)

Italian engraver, pioneer in the use of prints to reproduce the work of other artists. He studied with Francia and learned much from Dürer’s engravings in Venice (Dürer is said to have complained to the Venetian senate about being plagiarizes). In about 1510 he settled in Rome and thereafter worked mainly for Raphael, his engravings helping to spread the master’s style throughout Europe. Apart from his association with Raphael, Raimondi is best known for his series of erotic engravings (after designs by Giulio Romano), that led to his imprisonment in 1524. He left Rome after the Sack of 1527 and died in obscurity in Bologna.

Apollo Citharoedus of the Casa Sassi
Apollo Citharoedus of the Casa Sassi by

Apollo Citharoedus of the Casa Sassi

This engraving was made after a Roman copy of a Hellenistic sculpture representing Apollo with his cithara or lyre. During the first half of the sixteenth century, this sculpture was in the collection of Decidio and Fabio Sassi and displayed in the courtyard of the Casa Sassi, as recorded in a drawing by Maerten van Heemskerck.

The sculpture was acquired in 1546 from Fabio Sassi by Odoardo Farnese who had the missing left arm and the lower right arm completed before 1552. Raimondi’s print does not show the sculpture as he must have seen it in Rome as it was recorded by an anonymous Netherlandish artist before any restorations were undertaken: he completed Apollo’s arms. It was not uncommon for artists to complete ancient sculpture when representing it.

Apollo on the Parnassus
Apollo on the Parnassus by

Apollo on the Parnassus

Although we do not know exactly when Raphael first started working with Marcantonio Raimondi, it appears to have been around 1510, and by 1511 they were collaborating on a steady basis. Raphael handed over finished drawings in pen and ink or chalk to Marcantonio for use as his compositional sources. The engraving Apollo on the Parnassus was taken from a ‘discarded’ composition for the Parnassus fresco in the Stanza della Segnatura in the Vatican.

Crouching Venus
Crouching Venus by

Crouching Venus

The Crouching Venus, an antique marble, was extremely popular in the Renaissance. Marcantonio Raimondi’s engraving depicts the statue from the traditional side-view.

David and Goliath
David and Goliath by

David and Goliath

Marcantonio Raimondi of Bologna was one of the outstanding engravers to reproduce pictures by Raphael, and his prints contributed a good deal to the distribution of Raphael’s ideas, which could now be made available even to artists who never visited Rome. David and Goliath is one of the engravings made after Raphael.

God Appearing to Noah
God Appearing to Noah by

God Appearing to Noah

This print was made after one of the scenes by Raphael on the ceiling of Stanza di Eliodoro in the Vatican.

Jesus before the Temple
Jesus before the Temple by

Jesus before the Temple

This famous and in the 17th century much sought-after print, made by Raimondi after Raphael, was known also as The Woman on the Steps.

Lamentation
Lamentation by

Lamentation

This print was engraved after a drawing by Raphael.

Lucretia
Lucretia by

Lucretia

Marcantonio Antonio used the landscape from a print by Lucas van Leyden, and he engraved the figure of Lucretia after a drawing by Raphael.

Mars, Venus, and Eros
Mars, Venus, and Eros by

Mars, Venus, and Eros

The source of Marcantonio Raimondi’s Mars is the famous antique Roman Belvedere Torso.

Mars, Venus, and Eros (detail)
Mars, Venus, and Eros (detail) by

Mars, Venus, and Eros (detail)

The source of Marcantonio Raimondi’s Mars is the famous antique Roman Belvedere Torso.

Martyrdom of St Lawrence
Martyrdom of St Lawrence by

Martyrdom of St Lawrence

This engraving was made after a design by Baccio Bandinelli.

Massacre of the Innocents
Massacre of the Innocents by

Massacre of the Innocents

This engraving was made after the design by Raphael. It is the first version, Marcantonio and his workshop later engraved a second version.

Massacre of the Innocents with fir tree
Massacre of the Innocents with fir tree by

Massacre of the Innocents with fir tree

Marcantonio Raimondi made six engravings for Raphael. These were the products of an operation for which Raphael provided the designs, Raimodi the engraving skills, and Baviera the organization of the printing and sale.

The Massacre of the Innocents is probably the earliest of the six engravings in which Raphael’s name appears. Two highly accomplished and very similar versions of the engraving have come down to us: one is called “Massacre of the Innocents with fir tree” for a small tree in the upper right corner, and the other is known “Massacre of the Innocents without fir tree.” Both prints were produced by Marcantonio himself, and the version with fir tree was created first.

Massacre of the Innocents without fir tree
Massacre of the Innocents without fir tree by

Massacre of the Innocents without fir tree

Marcantonio Raimondi made six engravings for Raphael. These were the products of an operation for which Raphael provided the designs, Raimodi the engraving skills, and Baviera the organization of the printing and sale.

The Massacre of the Innocents is probably the earliest of the six engravings in which Raphael’s name appears. Two highly accomplished and very similar versions of the engraving have come down to us: one is called “Massacre of the Innocents with fir tree” for a small tree in the upper right corner, and the other is known “Massacre of the Innocents without fir tree.” Both prints were produced by Marcantonio himself, and the version with fir tree was created first.

Quos Ego!
Quos Ego! by

Quos Ego!

Ambitious in terms of the subject matter and the complex compositional conception in the style of classical relief sculptures, this print is considered among the most important ones of Marcantonio Raimondi’s prolific career and one of his most accomplished examples of “ancient engraving”. In fact, the composition of the scenes is inspired by a relief dating to the first century A.D. known as the “Tabula iliaca”, a tablet illustrating scenes from the Iliad and the Odyssey in a series of small narrative panels arranged around a central scene.

This episode, taken from Virgil’s Aeneid, tells of the exiles fleeing from fallen Troy whose journey is disrupted by Juno. Fortunately for the Greeks, the goddess asks Aeolus, god of winds, to unleash a storm upon the Trojan ships. The animated scene in the centre shows Neptune attempting to calm the winds just as he is about to utter the threatening phrase beginning with the words “Quos Ego”, his efforts visible in his expressive poses evoking the Laoco�n group, a sculpture group which had recently been discovered in Rome.

The Adoration of the Shepherds
The Adoration of the Shepherds by

The Adoration of the Shepherds

This outstanding engraving was made after D�rer’s woodcut from the series of Life of the Virgin.

Marcantonio Raimondi, from Bologna, was the best copyist of D�rer’s graphic prints in Italy, and worked faster than any other; he was also the most damaging to D�rer’s own business. In all, his workshop produced copies of eight engravings and over 60 woodcuts by the Nuremberg master, and to D�rer’s great annoyance they came on the art market as genuine. According to Vasari, Raimondi had acquired his models in the Piazza di San Marco in Venice.

The Dream of Raphael
The Dream of Raphael by

The Dream of Raphael

It is assumed that the engraving was made after a drawing by Raphael.

The Judgment of Paris
The Judgment of Paris by

The Judgment of Paris

This print represents the high point of the collaboration between Marcantonio Raimondi and Raphael, who designed the subject specifically for it to be replicated as an engraving, as well as the starting point of a successful method to spread his works. The immediate success of this graphic masterpiece, which according to Vasari “astonished all of Rome”, led to the production of various copies and derivative works throughout the following centuries, making it one of the most famous prints of the sixteenth century.

The scene relates to the grisaille painting executed for Pope Leo X below the fresco of the Parnassus in the Segnatura Room in the Vatican. In this print, Raimondi succeeds in expressing exquisite pictorial effects with a velvet tonality, achieved through the use of a grained plate which was then polished and sanded in the white areas and thus offering an array of differing shades of grey. However, in terms of its composition, there are many recurring elements from earlier works by Raphael dating back to 1510-15 approximately. The scene shows Raphael’s mastery of exploring subjects through different styles and formal characters, while demonstrating an interpretative freedom and power that was entirely new for that period.

The Judgment of Paris
The Judgment of Paris by

The Judgment of Paris

Marcantonio Raimondi contributed greatly to Raphael’s fame by engraving many of his paintings. A drawing mentioned by Vasari, and now lost, was the basis for the engraving. It shows Paris, King Priam’s son, giving the prize of the golden apple to Aphrodite as the most beautiful goddess.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 3 minutes):

Cristoph Willibald Gluck: Paride ed Elena, Paris’ aria

The Judgment of Paris
The Judgment of Paris by

The Judgment of Paris

This is one of the last engravings by Marcantonio and Raphael. Its composition was adapted from the reliefs of two ancient sarcophagi.

The Virtue as Domitor Fortunae
The Virtue as Domitor Fortunae by

The Virtue as Domitor Fortunae

The Vision of St Helena
The Vision of St Helena by

The Vision of St Helena

Marcantonio Raimondi, the real founder and main representative of the Italian High Renaissance graphics industry, copied many drawings by Raphael. This small sheet, a copy of Raphael, which like many works by him is neither signed nor dated, may have been produced around 1511 in Rome, when painter and engraver collaborated very closely.

Venus after Her Bath
Venus after Her Bath by

Venus after Her Bath

Venus and Cupid
Venus and Cupid by

Venus and Cupid

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