Agostino Carracci, St
Jerome, an unfinished
engraving
Italy, around AD 1602 (state
II)
The penitent saint
This unfinished plate (unsigned here but signed
on
state
IV) was published shortly after the death of Agostino Carracci
(1557-1602). It was then completed by another artist and re-issued.
The saint is identified by the lightly outlined cardinal's
hat in the incomplete lower right-hand corner, and by the
half-finished lion on the upper left. The isolated finger in the
unworked area on the upper right belongs to Jerome's left
hand, which was to grasp a
crucifix.
Agostino
Carracci, with his more famous brother Annibale (1560-1609) and
their cousin Lodovico (1555-1619), formed their own teaching
academy in Bologna in the 1580s. They moved away from the dominant
Mannerist style of painting in favour of greater naturalism and a
revival of the earlier High Renaissance art of Raphael,
Michelangelo and
Titian.
Agostino greatly
enriched the language of engraving by combining the achievements of
earlier masters. His first signed engraving of 1576 is influenced
by the style of his fellow Bolognese Marcantonio Raimondi. He then
adopted from Cornelis Cort the swelling and tapering engraved line,
in repeated parallel curves, that is especially visible on the rock
behind St Jerome, or in his hair and beard. Finally, he was
stimulated by Hendrik Goltzius to engrave the supple range of dots,
curves, and dark
cross-hatching
that describe Jerome's torso and extended right
arm.
D. DeG. Bohlin, Prints and related drawings by (National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1979)