- Jacopo de' Barbari
Infobox Painting|
title=Still-Life with Partridge and Iron Gloves
artist=Jacopo de' Barbari
year=1504
type=oil on wood
height=52
width=42,5
height_inch=20,5
width_inch = 16,7
diameter_cm =
diameter_inch =
city=Munich
museum=Alte Pinakothek Jacopo de' Barbari, sometimes known or referred to as de'Barbari, de Barberi, de Barbari, Barbaro, Barberino, Barbarigo or Barberigo, (c. 1440 – before 1516) was an Italian painter and
printmaker with a highly individual style. He moved from Venice to Germany in 1500, thus becoming the first Italian Renaissance artist of stature to work in Northern Europe. His few surviving paintings (about twelve) include the first known example of "trompe l'oeil " since antiquity. His twenty-nineengraving s and three very largewoodcut s were also highly influential.Life
His place and date of birth are unknown, but he was described as a Venetian by contemporaries, including
Albrecht Dürer ("van Venedig geporn"), and as 'old and weak' in 1511, so dates of between 1450 and 1470 have been proposed. Since the earlier part of the range would have him achieve sudden prominence at the age of nearly fifty, the later part would seem more likely. There have also been suggestions he was of German extraction; but it now seems clear he was Italian; there are surviving documents of his in Italian addressed to Germans. Early Italian Engravings from the National Gallery of Art; JA Levinson (ed); National Gallery of Art, 1973, LOC 7379624.] He signed most of his engravings with acaduceus , the sign of Mercury, and the Munich still-life (right) with this below his name: "Jac.o de barbarj p 1504" on the painted piece of paper.Alte Pinakotek Munich; Summary Catalogue ―various authors, 1986, Edition Lipp, ISBN 3874907015] He was probably not of the important VenetianBarbaro family as he was never listed in that family's genealogy.Nothing is known about his first decades, although
Alvise Vivarini has been suggested as his master. He left Venice forGermany in 1500, and thereafter is better documented. There he worked for the EmperorMaximilian I in Nuremberg for a year, then in various places forFrederick the Wise ofSaxony in 1503–5, before moving to the court of the ElectorJoachim I of Brandenburg for about the years 1506–8. In Germany he was often known as "Jacop Walch", probably from "Wälsch" meaning foreigner, a term especially used for Italians.He may have returned to Venice with
Philip the Handsome ofBurgundy , for whom he later worked in the Netherlands.David Landau in Jane Martineau (ed), The Genius of Venice, 1500–1600, 1983, Royal Academy of Arts, London.] By March of 1510 he was working for Philip's successor Archduchess Margaret in Brussels and Mechelen. In January 1511 he fell ill and made a will, and in March the Archduchess gave him a pension for life, on account of his age and weakness ("debilitation et vieillesse"). By 1516 he had died, leaving the Archduchess in possession of twenty-three engraving plates, which since many of his plates were probably engraved on both sides, means some engravings may not have survived.Work
Map of Venice and other woodcuts
His earliest documented work is his huge (1.315 x 2.818 metres, from six blocks) and impressive woodcut
aerial view "Map of Venice", for which a privilege was granted to its publisher in 1500, recording that the work had taken three years. [http://www.museiciviciveneziani.it/vedi.asp?id=998&musid=45 Musei Civici Veneziani] .] This clearly drew on the work of many surveyors, but was a spectacular feat nonetheless, and caused a considerable stir from the first.Suzanne Boorsch in KL Spangeberg (ed), "Six Centuries of Master Prints", Cincinnati Art Museum, 1993, no, ISBN 0-931537-15-0.] It was later updated by others to reflect major new building projects in a second state of the print.Apart from the "Map of Venice", he produced two other woodcuts, both of men and satyrs, which were the largest and most impressive figurative woodcuts yet produced, and which established the Italian tradition of fine, large, woodcuts for the following decades. These may have also been produced before 1500; they are clearly strongly influenced by
Mantegna .Contacts with Dürer
By the time the "Map of Venice" was published de' Barberi had already left for Germany, where he met Dürer, who he may have already known from Dürer's first Italian trip (a passage in a letter of Dürer's is ambiguous). They discussed human proportion, not obviously one of de' Barberi's strengths, but Dürer was evidently fascinated by what he had to say, though he recorded that de' Barberi had not told him everything he knew:
Twenty years later Dürer tried unsuccessfully to get the Archduchess Margaret, Hapsburg Regent of the Netherlands, to give him a manuscript book she had on the subject by de' Barberi, by then dead; the book has not survived.
Dating of artwork
De' Barberi spent a year in Nuremberg, where Dürer lived, in 1500-01, and influences flowed in both directions between him and Dürer for a number of years. None of his engravings are dated, so much of the dating of them depends on resemblances to dated prints by Dürer; this is complicated by uncertainty in some cases as to who was influencing who. Five of his engravings were in an album of
Hartmann Schedel 's , which was bound up in December 1504, which gives further evidence as to dating. De' Barberi had probably made some engravings before leaving Italy, but his best engravings (and perhaps all of them) were probably done after his move to Germany in 1500.Some of his paintings are dated as: 1500, 1503, 1504, 1508. Documents relating to his employment by Maximilian suggest his work was to include illuminating manuscripts, but no work in this medium has been generally attributed to him. His only generally accepted
drawing is aCleopatra in theBritish Museum , apparently done as a study for an engraving which has not survived.Engravings
His style is related to his possible master,
Alvise Vivarini and toGiovanni Bellini , but has a languorous quality all its own. Apart from Dürer, the influence ofMantegna 's technique also appears in what are probably the earlier engravings, done around the turn of the century, with parallel hatching. His engravings are mostly small, showing just a few figures. Truculent satyrs feature in several prints; there are a number of mythological subjects, including two "Sacrifices to Priapus".The earlier prints show figures with "small heads and somewhat shapeless bodies, with sloping shoulders and thick torsos supported by slender legs" — also seen in his paintings. Probably from a middle period come several nudes, the most famous being "Apollo and Diana" [http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/mypr/ho_20.92.2.htm Met Museum] .] , "St Sebastian" [http://www.mfa.org/collections/search_art.asp?recview=true&id=80946&coll_keywords=Barbari&coll_accession=&coll_name=&coll_artist=&coll_place=&coll_medium=&coll_culture=&coll_classification=&coll_credit=&coll_provenance=&coll_location=&coll_has_
] .] and the "Three Bound Captives". In these his ability to organise the whole composition has greatly improved.In a final group, the style becomes more Italianate, and the compositions more complex. These have an enigmatic, haunting atmosphere, and a very refined technique. Levenson has proposed that they date from his period in the Netherlands and were influenced by the young
Lucas van Leyden .Paintings
His paintings are mostly portraits or half-length groups of religious figures. He painted a live "Sparrowhawk" [http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/cgi-bin/WebObjects.dll/CollectionPublisher.woa/wa/work?workNumber=NG3088 National Gallery] .] (
National Gallery, London ), which is probably a fragment of a larger work. The very earlystill-life of a "Partridge, gauntlets, and crossbow bolt" (Alte Pinakothek ,Munich ) is often called the first small scale "trompe l'oeil " painting since antiquity; it may well have been the cover or reverse of a portrait (however a fragmentary panel by another Venetian,Vittorio Carpaccio has a trompe l'oeil letter-rack of about 1490 on the reverse. In theGemäldegalerie, Berlin there is a "Portrait of a German Man" and a religious subject. TheLouvre has a religious group, and Philadelphia a pair of figures.A disputed but famous work, the "Portrait of Fra
Luca Pacioli and his student, (?)Guidobaldo da Montefeltro , Duke ofUrbino " is in theMuseo di Capodimonte inNaples . This shows theFranciscan mathmetician and expert on perspective demonstrating geometry at a table on which lie his own "Summa" and a work byEuclid . His exquisitely dressed pupil ignores this and looks out at the viewer. The work is signed "IACO. BAR VIGEN/NIS 1495".References
ee also
Old master print External links
* [http://www.ritrattopacioli.it/texting.htm Discussion of the portrait of Fra Luca Pacioli and its attribution]
* [http://www.mfa.org/collections/search_art.asp?coll_accession=&coll_name=&coll_artist=Jacopo+de%27Barbari&coll_medium=&coll_culture=&coll_classification=&coll_credit=&coll_provenance=&coll_has_
]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.