Item #4850 L'ENEA VAGANTE PITTURE DEI CARRACCI/ INTAGLIATE E DEDICATE AL/SERENISSIMO PRINCIPE LEOPOLDO MEDICI/DA GIUSEPPE MARIA MITELLI BOLOGNESE/ ....MDCLXIII. Giuseppe Maria VIRGIL. Mitelli, Carracci – Annibale, Agostino, and Ludovico, 1634 - 1718 Bologna.
L'ENEA VAGANTE PITTURE DEI CARRACCI/ INTAGLIATE E DEDICATE AL/SERENISSIMO PRINCIPE LEOPOLDO MEDICI/DA GIUSEPPE MARIA MITELLI BOLOGNESE/ ....MDCLXIII.
L'ENEA VAGANTE PITTURE DEI CARRACCI/ INTAGLIATE E DEDICATE AL/SERENISSIMO PRINCIPE LEOPOLDO MEDICI/DA GIUSEPPE MARIA MITELLI BOLOGNESE/ ....MDCLXIII.
L'ENEA VAGANTE PITTURE DEI CARRACCI/ INTAGLIATE E DEDICATE AL/SERENISSIMO PRINCIPE LEOPOLDO MEDICI/DA GIUSEPPE MARIA MITELLI BOLOGNESE/ ....MDCLXIII.
L'ENEA VAGANTE PITTURE DEI CARRACCI/ INTAGLIATE E DEDICATE AL/SERENISSIMO PRINCIPE LEOPOLDO MEDICI/DA GIUSEPPE MARIA MITELLI BOLOGNESE/ ....MDCLXIII.
L'ENEA VAGANTE PITTURE DEI CARRACCI/ INTAGLIATE E DEDICATE AL/SERENISSIMO PRINCIPE LEOPOLDO MEDICI/DA GIUSEPPE MARIA MITELLI BOLOGNESE/ ....MDCLXIII.
L'ENEA VAGANTE PITTURE DEI CARRACCI/ INTAGLIATE E DEDICATE AL/SERENISSIMO PRINCIPE LEOPOLDO MEDICI/DA GIUSEPPE MARIA MITELLI BOLOGNESE/ ....MDCLXIII.
L'ENEA VAGANTE PITTURE DEI CARRACCI/ INTAGLIATE E DEDICATE AL/SERENISSIMO PRINCIPE LEOPOLDO MEDICI/DA GIUSEPPE MARIA MITELLI BOLOGNESE/ ....MDCLXIII.
L'ENEA VAGANTE PITTURE DEI CARRACCI/ INTAGLIATE E DEDICATE AL/SERENISSIMO PRINCIPE LEOPOLDO MEDICI/DA GIUSEPPE MARIA MITELLI BOLOGNESE/ ....MDCLXIII.
L'ENEA VAGANTE PITTURE DEI CARRACCI/ INTAGLIATE E DEDICATE AL/SERENISSIMO PRINCIPE LEOPOLDO MEDICI/DA GIUSEPPE MARIA MITELLI BOLOGNESE/ ....MDCLXIII.
L'ENEA VAGANTE PITTURE DEI CARRACCI/ INTAGLIATE E DEDICATE AL/SERENISSIMO PRINCIPE LEOPOLDO MEDICI/DA GIUSEPPE MARIA MITELLI BOLOGNESE/ ....MDCLXIII.

L'ENEA VAGANTE PITTURE DEI CARRACCI/ INTAGLIATE E DEDICATE AL/SERENISSIMO PRINCIPE LEOPOLDO MEDICI/DA GIUSEPPE MARIA MITELLI BOLOGNESE/ ....MDCLXIII.

Rome: Da Gio. Giacomo de Rossi alla Pace al insegna di Parigi, 1663.

Price: $9,500.00

Oblong folio: Sheet dimensions: 410 x 545 mm., plate: 245/250 x 425 mm. 21 etchings printed on 17 leaves. Complete.

FIRST EDITION.

Bound in modern quarter red morocco over marbled boards. A very good copy of the complete set of etchings. Some mostly mild soiling and staining, a little heavier on two of the final plates, and one small defect in plate 4 (repaired).

A complete set of etchings after the parietal frescoes in Palazzo Fava (Bologna), painted by the Carracci ca. 1593 depicting the story of Aeneas. The set comprises a title page, 12 etched plates, numbered from I to XII with the scenes of the cycle; and 4 additional sheets (with 2 etchings per sheet) reproducing the trompe l’oeil grisaille “statues” that divide the scenes. The title leaf includes the dedication to Lepoldo de Médici (1617-1675), with the Medici arms.

The frescoes, illustrating scenes from Books II and III of the “Aeneid”, were etched by Giuseppe Maria Mitelli after drawings made by Flaminio Torri, whose untimely death had prevented him from executing the plates himself. At the foot of the plates, Mitelli attributes the individual scenes to one or another of the Carracci (Annibale, Agostino, or Ludovico), but these individual attributions do not always correspond to the conclusions of the most recent criticism. According to the Carracci biographer Carlo Cesare Malvasia (“Felsina pittrice, 1678), the frescoes were executed under the direction of Ludovico, with at least two scenes (Polyphemus and the Harpies) being drawn by Ludovico and painted by Annibale.

The Carracci – Annibale (1560-1609), his brother Agostino (1557-1602), and their cousin Ludovico (1555-1619)- are among the most famous Bolognese painters of the last two decades of the sixteenth and the first part of the seventeenth centuries. Their artistic production took on a new importance in the history of Italian and European art of that time, exerting a huge influence on subsequent generations. They gave life to an art based on a renewed awareness of nature and on the careful study of reality, contributing to the development of the Baroque style, which was opposed to the artificiality of late Mannerism. Towards the end of the sixteenth century, the Carracci founded what has been called the first private school of painting of the modern age: the Accademia degli Incamminati. Annibale, certainly the most talented of the three, would be called to Rome to work for the powerful Farnese family, while Ludovico and Agostino remained rooted in Bologna. But it is in Palazzo Fava that their “avvenetura” begins.

Here the Carracci executed their first commission and the first important fresco cycle of their career. In 1584, thanks also to the intercession of Antonio Carracci, father of Annibale and Agostino and tailor of the Fava family, Count Filippo Fava entrusted the decoration of the entire “piano nobile” of the building to young artists, who immediately gave proved their talent by creating an absolute jewel of Bolognese and Italian art. Thanks to the Fava family, a family of patrons who played a fundamental role in the history and artistic development of Bologna, Palazzo Fava became a place of study for the young artists of the time, who were able to take advantage of mobile scaffolding to closely observe the adventures represented in the friezes of the cycle: those of Jason and Medea and in those of Aeneas, the latter of which is reproduced here. (https://genusbononiaeblog.it/i-carracci-palazzo-fava/)

The engraver, Giuseppe Maria Mitelli, was renowned for the familiar, playful, carnivalesque and visionary themes of his etchings, exemplified by allegorical figures, genre scenes, and images of everyday life in the streets of his native Bologna. He produced a large and varied body of work, from genre scenes and fantastic imagery to reproductions of the works of the great Italian painters, such as this suite. Mitelli was among the founders of Bologna’s Accademia Clementina and was one of its first directors. For a full biography, see “Agostino e Giuseppe Maria Mitelli” in Arte antica e moderna, 3 (1958), pp. 295-301.

Varignana, 45-57. Bertarelli, 59-79