Details
GIORGIO GHISI (1520-1582) AFTER GIOVANNI BATTISTA BERTANI (1516-1576)
The Judgment of Paris
engraving
1555
on laid paper, watermark Double-headed crowned Eagle (similar to Lewis & Lewis 15 and Briquet 304, circa 1559)
a fine impression of this large print
third, final state
printing sharply, with great clarity, contrasts and depth
trimmed to or just outside the borderline or subject
some small defects and repairs
generally in very good condition
Sheet 395 x 523 mm.
Provenance
Unidentified, paraphe in pencil verso (not in Lugt).
Unidentified, inscribed 'Prevost' (?) in brown ink verso (not in Lugt).
Paul Prouté (1887-1981), Paris (Lugt 2103c).
Literature
Bartsch 60; Lewis & Lewis 16
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Lot Essay

This large and fanciful engraving is an outstanding example for the complex relations - personal, artistic and economic - between printmakers, painters, patrons and publishers in 16th century Italy and beyond. The model for Ghisi's engraving was a drawing by his compatriot from Mantua, the painter and architect Giovanni Battista Bertani. It is now in the collection of the Musei Civici del Castello Visconteo in Pavia. The design borrows various elements from Marcantonio Raimondi's engraving of the same subject, while the figure of Cupid stems from a fresco in the Sala di Psiche in Palazzo Te by Giulio Romano, with whom Bertani had trained in Mantua and whom he eventually succeeded as art director at the Gonzaga court in Mantua. Ghisi however engraved the plate not in Mantua, not even in Italy, but during his period in Antwerp between 1550 and 1555, where he collaborated with the renowned publisher Hieronymus Cock, whose address can be read in the third state of the engraving offered here, in the tablet at lower left.
The present sheet is also an example for the censoring of depictions of nudity or any sexual content, which many prints had to endure in later, more prudish times. Genitals and even the breast of women were often covered with ink or wash or scratched out. In this case, an attempt has been made to gently remove the nipples of the goddesses, while the satyr's genitals had been completely obliterated, but have since been rather wittily and three-dimensionally replaced.

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