Geronima Parasole
(?–1622)
“Moses”, 1622, after Antonio
Tempesta (1555?– 1630)
Woodcut on very fine wove paper with small margins from a
late edition
Lettered on the block featured at the lower right corner:
"AT" and "P.M.F."
The British Museum offers the following description of this
print:
“Moses; seated facing front, looking towards left, holding a
rod and a law tablet; after Tempesta. Woodcut”
Condition: near faultless, well-inked crisp impression on
fine wove paper in excellent condition (i.e. there are no tears, holes, folds,
abrasions, stains or foxing), nevertheless, there is thinning at the upper
corners (verso) where there was once mounting hinges.
I am selling this remarkably fine woodcut from one of the
few known women printmakers from the Renaissance era, for the total cost of
AU$148 (currently US$113.65/EUR97.73/GBP85.68 at the time of this listing)
including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are interested in purchasing this eye-catchingly
superb print, 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
Sadly women were actively discouraged from being professional
artists during the early years of the Renaissance. For instance, only a few
decades before this print was executed, women were not allowed to join a
craftsmen’s guild, or to be apprenticed to an artist or even to sign their name
on artworks. Fortunately there were a few strong-willed women
artist/printmakers that changed this status quo, hence the Parasole’s initials inscribed
on the block supporting Moses’ foot. Another of these women who shook the art
world was Diana Scultori (aka Diana Ghisi; Diana Mantovana) (1536–88). Diana not
only changed her surname according to who was in power at the time to help her career, but Diana was also the first woman to EVER to
sign an artwork. Moreover, Diana was such a savvy artistic entrepreneur that she even managed to copyright men’s night caps—imagine what would have
happened to the marketing of baseball caps if there hadn’t been the great Diana
as the first to copyright a cap’s design!
Regarding the execution of this print, note the cross-hatching employed to give three dimensional form to the drapery on Moses and
the columns in the distance. One could be forgiven to see the fine network of
overlaid parallel lines as being achieved as if the artist were working with
pen and ink. Amazingly, this is far from the truth. This pattern of crossed
lines is an illusion: a complete fabrication. To create the illusion, Parasole
needed to chisel/cut away the diamond-shaped spaces between the crossed lines with
such precision and unbelievable patience that the eye “believes” that the black
marks are hand drawn lines.
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