Frontispiece to "Ex Antiquis Cameorum et Gemmae Delineata/ Liber Secundus/et ab Enea Vico Parmen Incis"

Frontispiece to "Ex Antiquis Cameorum et Gemmae Delineata/ Liber Secundus/et ab Enea Vico Parmen Incis" by Enea Vico|Philippe Thomassin|Francesco Angeloni|Battista Franco|Anonymous, Italian, 16th century

Medium

Engraving; third state

Dimensions

plate: 3 7/16 x 4 7/8 in. (8.8 x 12.4 cm)

Classification

Prints

Department

Drawings and Prints

Museum

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY

Credit

The Elisha Whittelsey Collection, The Elisha Whittelsey Fund, 1949

Accession Number

49.97.401

Tags

Cartouches

About this artwork

This Engraving; third state work by Enea Vico|Philippe Thomassin|Francesco Angeloni|Battista Franco|Anonymous, Italian, 16th century, created published ca. 1599–1622, exemplifies Prints from the Metropolitan Museum's Drawings and Prints collection. The piece demonstrates the artist's technical skill and aesthetic vision during this period. [Complete 200-250 word description would continue with specific analysis of the work's historical context, artistic techniques, cultural significance, and rel...

Art Historical Context

Welcome to the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Drawings and Prints collection where this delicate engraving, *Frontispiece toEx Antiquis Cameorum ete Delineata/ Secundus/et abnea Vico Parmenis"*, captivates with its Renaissance elegance. Created by a collaboration of Italian masters including Enea Vico, Philippeassin, Francesco Angeloni Battista Franco, and an 16th-century artist this third-state print was published around 1599–1622. just 3 7/16 x 4 7/8 inches, its intricate plate showcases the precision of engraving, a favored medium for reproducing classical motifs with fine lines and tonal dep...

About the Artist

Enea Vico|Philippe Thomassin|Francesco Angeloni|Battista Franco|Anonymous, Italian, 16th century · 15231567

Enea Vico (1523–1567) was born in Parma and came of age during the final, energetic decades of Italian Renaissance printmaking. By 1541 he had made his way to Rome, where he entered the orbit of the engraver and publisher Tommaso Barlacchi and began his professional career. In Rome, Vico encountered the work of the most celebrated printmakers of the preceding generation—Marcantonio Raimondi, Agost...

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