Diana Scultori (aka Diana Ghisi;
Diana Mantovana) (1536–88)
“Horatius
Cocles Escaping into the River after Holding off the Enemy”, 1575–88 (the
attribution of these dates is based on the time when Scultori first began to
sign her name “Diana”), after Giulio Romano’s (1499–1546) design for the Sala
di Attilio Regolo, Casino della Grotta, Palazzo Te, Mantua. (See Paolo Bellini
1991, ‘L'opera incisa Adamo e Diana Scultori”, Vicenza, 1991, pp. 163-5.)
Engraving on
laid paper trimmed along the platemark, first state (lifetime) impression.
Size: (sheet)
24.6 x 27.3 cm; (image borderline) 24.3 x 27 cm
Lettered with
the artist’s name on the pillar of the bridge at lower left: “DIANA”
State i (of ii)
before the addition of publisher’s address at lower right.
TIB 31 (15). 34
(447) (Walter L Strauss, Suzanne Boorsch & John Spike [Eds.] 1986, “The
Illustrated Bartsch”, vol. 31, Abaris Books, New York, p. 274); Bartsch
XV.447.34; Bellini 1991 2.I
The British
Museum has copies of both the first and second state of this print; see state i:
http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=1494977&partId=1&searchText=Diana+Scultori&page=1;
and state ii: http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=1494972&partId=1&searchText=1874,0808.320&page=1
Condition: near
faultless lifetime impression trimmed along the plate mark. There are many
notations by previous collectors (verso).
I am selling
this exceptionally rare print by one of the historically significant women
printmakers from the Renaissance (arguably the first person to copyright the
design for a cap … admittedly a night cap) for AU$456 (currently US$340.96/EUR304.61/GBP265.37
at the time of this listing) including postage and handling to anywhere in the
world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this lifetime impression in pristine condition of
major print from the Renaissance era executed by one of the very few famous
women printmakers of the time (and the first to have permission/”privilege” to
sell her work under her own name), please contact me
(oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make
the payment easy.
This print has been sold
If I were to compile a list of women artists from the Renaissance era, the name, Diana Scultori, would be at the top.
Arguably,
Scultori’s most significant achievement is that she was the FIRST woman to be
permitted to sell her work using her own name. Today the idea that artists sought
permission to sell their work may seem odd. At the time, however, artists
applied to the papal bureaucracy for such a “privilege” (i.e. copyright
protection) to ensure that their designs were legally authorised and that other
artists were not allowed to copy their work. Indeed, the penalty for any
transgression of an artist’s privilege was harsh: “excommunication, a fine of
50 gold ducats, and seizure of all the contraband material” (see Evelyn Lincoln
2000, “The Invention of the Italian Printmaker”, Yale University Press, New
Haven, pp. 123-4).
In terms of
Scultori’s business acumen, Diana was very shrewd, in the sense that she changed
her name according to who was in power and would benefit her career. For
example, the name “Diana Ghisi” was adopted by Diana as the surname, “Ghisi”,
linked her to the famous Mantuan engraver, Giorgio Ghisi—a misrepresentation of
name that even the august Bartsch catalogue raisonné has failed to correct.
Indeed, there are no documents from Diana’s lifetime where she ever uses her
true surname, as the name “Scultori” was not useful in the marketplace.
As another example of shrewd business practices, Dana choice of
portrayed subject matter and the inscribed dedications on some of her plates were
clearly designed to advance her career. For instance, her first published
engraving, “Volute of a Composite
Capital”, 1576, features not only a subject that would have appealed to her
patron— Lord Claudio Gonzaga, the chief supervisor of the Mantuan court— because
he wrote a book on the topic and that the print was larger than any other
engraving of such a subject at the time, but the tone of the inscription is so unambiguously
ingratiating:
“To the most
illustrious Lord Claudio Gonzaga, Diana Mantuana. It is fitting that this labour
of mine, having come to life under the rule of your most excellent house,
receives new life under your lordship’s name, because now it enters the world
favoured by you with the most ample privilege of the sanctity of Our Lord.
Accept this then with a kind heart, and with it the service of my house in Rome
…”
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