First comprehensive exhibition of chiaroscuro woodcuts from Italian Renaissance on view at National Gallery of Art
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First comprehensive exhibition of chiaroscuro woodcuts from Italian Renaissance on view at National Gallery of Art
Attributed to Antonio da Trento or Niccolò Vicentino, after Parmigianino, Circe Drinking (Circella), c. 1540s, chiaroscuro woodcut from two blocks in red and black (printed by the Vicentino workshop) sheet: 21.6 x 19 cm (8 1/2 x 71/2 in.) mat: 55.9 x 40.6 cm (22 x 16 in.) National Gallery of Art, Washington, Ailsa Mellon Bruce Fund.



WASHINGTON, DC.- Chiaroscuro woodcuts are among the rarest and most beautiful prints that flourished throughout Renaissance Italy. This exhibition, with its accompanying catalog, addresses all aspects of this remarkable art form, from attribution and chronology to materials and processes, intention and reception. The first comprehensive study devoted to the Italian chiaroscuro woodcut, the exhibition is based on new art-historical and technical research carried out over the last decade. Presenting some 100 of the finest impressions from American and British collections, The Chiaroscuro Woodcut in Renaissance Italy will be on view at the National Gallery of Art from October 14, 2018, through January 20, 2019.

"One of the earliest and most successful ventures into color printing, the chiaroscuro woodcut redefined what viewers in the Renaissance had come to expect from the art of printmaking. This unique exhibition celebrates the spirit of innovation and collaboration embodied by these prints, while shedding new light on the remarkable achievements of their makers," said Earl A. Powell III, director, National Gallery of Art. "The collaboration between the National Gallery of Art and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art represents a milestone in the study of early printmaking."

The chiaroscuro woodcut, which took its name from the Italian term for modeling in light and shadow, involved the superimposed printing of multiple woodblocks that were accurately aligned and inked in different gradations of a color. Over the course of the 16th century the technique engaged such celebrated painters and draftsmen as Titian, Raphael, and Parmigianino and underwent sophisticated advances in the hands of talented printmakers active throughout the Italian peninsula. Embraced as a means of disseminating designs and prized as works of art in their own right, these prints exemplify the rich imagery, artistic innovation, and technical virtuosity of the Italian Renaissance.

The exhibition is organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in association with the National Gallery of Art, Washington.

The exhibition casts new light on the beginnings and remarkable efflorescence of the chiaroscuro woodcut in Renaissance Italy. Although highly regarded through the centuries, this complex process has remained one of the least understood phenomena of early printmaking. Arranged according to its broad chronological evolution, and bringing new attention to the materials and means of production, the exhibition presents the principal chiaroscuro workshops, with several works displayed in different color palettes. Developments in style, approach, subject, and format testify to the fascination among artists and collectors in the range of aesthetic possibilities that this exquisite technique offered.

The history of the technique in Italy began with Ugo da Carpi (c. 1468/1470–1532), who, in 1516, claimed he had discovered a "new method of printing in chiaro et scuro," and applied for a privilege from the Venetian Senate to protect his discovery from copyists. Through his technical proficiency and distinguished associations with Titian in Venice and Raphael's circle in Rome, Ugo created chiaroscuro woodcuts of outstanding sophistication. He rapidly advanced the technique from a basic two-block linear mode to a more complex tonal approach using as many as four blocks. While Ugo did not conceive new designs, he was closely involved in all other aspects of production, from cutting to printing. His 15 attributed chiaroscuros established the foundation for the technique that flourished in Italy through the Renaissance.

Ugo da Carpi went on to collaborate with Parmigianino on the masterwork Diogenes, an unparalleled achievement in the technique's history. During his activity in Bologna in the years 1527–1530, Parmigianino also engaged the printmaker Antonio da Trento (active c. 1527–1540s) to make chiaroscuros. Antonio's refined cutting of calligraphic strokes sensitively transmitted Parmigianino's fluent drawing hand. The seven chiaroscuro woodcuts and one combination technique print issued by Parmigianino from his Bolognese shop matched the artist's graceful draftsmanship with skilled cutting, fine inks, and exacting printing.

The workshop of Niccolò Vicentino (active c. 1540s) was the most prolific of the 16th century, both in the number of chiaroscuros executed and the impressions pulled of them. Most were modeled on Italian designs from the mid-1510s to the late 1530s, including several by Raphael and Parmigianino. Vicentino's workshop introduced bold, saturated colors and prioritized expediency in its production methods, pointing to the technique's increased commercialization. Although some uncertainty has surrounded the attribution of Vicentino's unsigned works, close study of block-cutting, printing characteristics, and publishing histories provides new grounds for establishing his workshop's oeuvre.

The prints of Domenico Beccafumi (1484/1486–1551), like his drawings and paintings, display the Sienese artist's fertile invention, bold draftsmanship, and fluent expression of dramatic chiaroscuro. Beccafumi is unique among chiaroscurists in having designed and cut his own blocks, and his prints are immediate, spirited expressions of his artistic vision. In his nine pure chiaroscuro woodcuts and six engravings printed with tonal blocks and dating to the 1540s, he used unconventional tools and cutting methods and exploited fully the technique's inherent potential for variations, changing the manner in which he inked and printed his blocks.

Alongside the major practitioners, other Italian painters and printmakers from the 1530s through the 1580s also explored the chiaroscuro woodcut to great creative ends. The designs of Titian, Raphael and his circle, and Parmigianino continued to be important sources through mid-century. However, as enthusiasm for the novel technique spread to secondary artistic centers from Cremona to Naples, different styles and manners were espoused. Complementing the activity of these smaller workshops in late century was a rise in the republication of earlier prints.

Andrea Andreani (c. 1559–1629) first took up the chiaroscuro technique around 1583 and quickly became its most accomplished practitioner of late century. Andreani worked collaboratively with esteemed artists of his day and also translated the great masters of earlier generations. He produced monumental works, introduced new subjects, and looked beyond traditional graphic and painted sources for his models, turning to sculpture, bronze reliefs, and marble intarsia designs. His output, aimed principally at high-end collectors and art connoisseurs, brought the chiaroscuro woodcut to new heights of technical and visual refinement.

The exhibition is conceived and organized by Naoko Takahatake, curator of prints and drawings at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Her research began at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, as a graduate curatorial intern in 2006 and as Andrew W. Mellon Curatorial Fellow (2008–2010). The exhibition is coordinated in Washington by Jonathan Bober, Andrew W. Mellon Senior Curator of Prints and Drawings, National Gallery of Art.










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