Isabella Piccini
Appearance
Isabella Piccini | |
---|---|
Born | Elisabetta Piccini[1] 1644[2] |
Died | 29 April 1732[2] Venice, Republic of Venice |
Nationality | Italian[2] |
Known for | Etching Engraving Illustration |
Isabella Piccini (born Elisabetta Piccini 1644-1732)[1] was an Italian artist and nun. She worked in the mediums of etching, engraving, and illustration.
Life and work
[edit]Piccini was born in Venice in 1644.[2] Her father was etcher and engraver Giacomo Piccini.[3] He trained Piccini in engraving and illustration in the style of the great masters such as Peter Paul Rubens and Titian.[1] Piccini became a Franciscan nun in 1666, joining the Convent of Santa Croce. Upon joining, she changed her name to Sister Isabella.[1]
Prominent Italians commissioned works from her, including portraits and religious artworks. Giovanni Antonio Remondini distributed her prints throughout Europe.[4] All income she made was split between her convent and her family.[1]
Notable collections
[edit]- Title Page Dittionario Italiano, e Francese Del Signor Veneroni, 1644–1734, Metropolitan Museum of Art[5]
Gallery
[edit]-
Vita beatae Zitae virginis Lucensis, ex vetustissimo codice m.s. fidelitèr transumpta.Ferrara: Typographia Filoniana, 1688
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Engraving of Saint Jovan Vladimir, 1690
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Cavallo imperfetto del Polesine, 1692
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Simboli predicabili : estratti da sacri evangeli che corrono nella quadragesima : delineati con morali, & eruditi discorsi, 1692
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Portrait of poet Ottavio de' Rossi
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Portrait of writer Francesco Fulvio Frugoni
References
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to Isabella Piccini.
- ^ a b c d e "Isabella Piccini and Angela Baroni, 18th-century engravers". Graphic Arts. 9 November 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
- ^ a b c d "Discover print artist, draftsman, etcher Isabella Piccini". RKD. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
- ^ Trevisan, Luca; Zavatta, Giulio (2013). Incisori itineranti nell'area veneta nel Seicento: Dizionario bio-bibliografico (in Italian). Verona: Università di Verona. p. 88-91. ISBN 978-88-98513-25-3.
- ^ Delia Gaze; Maja Mihajlovic; Leanda Shrimpton (1997). Dictionary of Women Artists: Artists, J-Z. Taylor & Francis. p. 61. ISBN 978-1-884964-21-3.
- ^ "Title Page Dittionario Italiano, e Francese Del Signor Veneroni". Metropolitan Museum of Art. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
Categories:
- 1664 births
- 16th-century Venetian women
- 16th-century Christian nuns
- 16th-century Italian women artists
- 1732 deaths
- 17th-century engravers
- Franciscan nuns
- Italian engravers
- Italian etchers
- 17th-century Italian Roman Catholic religious sisters and nuns
- Nuns and art
- Republic of Venice artists
- Women engravers
- Italian women illustrators
- Women etchers
- Catholic engravers
- Female Catholic artists
- Catholic etchers