ANDREANI, Andrea - b. ~1558 Mantova, d. ~1629 Mantova - WGA

ANDREANI, Andrea

(b. ~1558 Mantova, d. ~1629 Mantova)

Italian woodcutter and printmaker. He is known especially for his chiaroscuro printing, a technique developed in the early 16th century to facilitate shading. In this technique, several woodblocks are used for the same print, each block engraved to produce a different tone of the same colour.

Andreani was active in Florence (1584-85), in Siena (1586-93), and in Mantua (1599). Between 1602 and 1610 he appears in contemporary documents as a publisher of prints that were not of his own design. All of Andreani’s known woodcuts, in fact, are after the paintings of other artists, especially the 15th-century Mannerists Giambologna and Domenico Beccafumi and the Venetian painter Jacopo Ligozzi. The best known of Andreani’s works are 12 large woodcuts representing the Trionfo di Giulio Cesare (Triumph of Julius Caesar) and a series of prints reproducing nine sequential canvases by Andrea Mantegna. The several sections of this work were intended to be pasted together or mounted as a single frieze; each print has an individual character yet fits into its place in the unified whole.

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 1)
The Triumph of Caesar (Section 1) by

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 1)

This is Section 1 of the series of 9 made after Andrea Mantegna’s paintings.

The chiaroscuro woodcut from four blocks in green-brown shows Roman soldiers carrying banners depicting various triumphant battles of Julius Caesar.

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 3)
The Triumph of Caesar (Section 3) by

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 3)

This is Section 3 of the series of 9 made after Andrea Mantegna’s paintings.

The chiaroscuro woodcut from four blocks in brown shows the trophies of war.

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 4)
The Triumph of Caesar (Section 4) by

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 4)

This is Section 4 of the series of 9 made after Andrea Mantegna’s paintings.

The chiaroscuro woodcut from four blocks in brown shows men carrying vases, others at right sounding trumpets.

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 5)
The Triumph of Caesar (Section 5) by

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 5)

This is Section 5 of the series of 9 made after Andrea Mantegna’s paintings.

The chiaroscuro woodcut from four blocks in brown shows elephant at the right and a young man lighting candelabra.

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 6)
The Triumph of Caesar (Section 6) by

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 6)

This is Section 6 of the series of 9 made after Andrea Mantegna’s paintings.

The chiaroscuro woodcut from four blocks in brown shows men carrying standards of trophies.

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 7)
The Triumph of Caesar (Section 7) by

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 7)

This is Section 7 of the series of 9 made after Andrea Mantegna’s paintings.

The chiaroscuro woodcut from four blocks in brown-green shows procession of men, women and children.

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 8)
The Triumph of Caesar (Section 8) by

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 8)

This is Section 8 of the series of 9 made after Andrea Mantegna’s paintings.

The chiaroscuro woodcut from four blocks in green and brown shows procession of musicians and other holding standards.

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 9)
The Triumph of Caesar (Section 9) by

The Triumph of Caesar (Section 9)

This is Section 9 of the series of 9 made after Andrea Mantegna’s paintings.

The chiaroscuro woodcut from four blocks in green shows Julius Caesar on his horse-drawn chariot.

The Triumph of Caesar (frontispiece)
The Triumph of Caesar (frontispiece) by

The Triumph of Caesar (frontispiece)

This is the frontispiece to The Triumph of Caesar that comprises nine sheets as well as ornament pilasters. The series of chiaroscuro woodcuts was made after Andrea Mantegna’s paintings.

The frontispiece depicts a bust portrait of Mantegna.

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