Pietro Santi Bartoli

Pietro Santi Bartoli (also Sante or Santo; 1635 7 November 1700) was an Italian engraver, draughtsman and painter.

Pietro Santi Bartoli, engraving Nero Circus, 1699.

Life and career

Illustration to the review of Picturae antiquae cryptarum romanarum published in Acta Eruditorum, 1708
Illustration to the review of Le antiche lucerne sepolcrali figurate published in Acta Eruditorum, 1692

Bartoli was born at Perugia.

He moved to Rome in 1635 as a youth, there he studied painting under Jean Lemaire and Poussin, but abandoned it to devote himself entirely to engraving and as an antiquarian for Christina, Queen of Sweden. He engraved many Roman monuments, publishing in Admiranda Romanorum Antiquitatum (Rome, 1693). About 1660, he excavated the Domus Aurea, of which he published drawings.

As a draughtsman, Bartoli reproduced the Codice Virgiliano (Rome, Vatican, Bib. Apostolica, Cod. Vat. 3867) in 55 plates (1677; Rome, Calcografia N.), commissioned by Cardinal Camillo Massimo. For Massimo, he also did drawings of ancient Roman paintings and mosaics (Glasgow, U. Lib.). Later, he lived in Paris, where he was introduced at the court of Louis XIV. In 1699, with the engraver Domenico de' Rossi, he produced Romanae Magnitudinis Monumenta, a later edition of the 1637 Antiquae Urbis Splendor by Giacomo Lauro. Bartoli adapted 138 of Lauro's original plates and engraved 16 new ones.

He died in Rome. His plates are chiefly etched.

Selected works

Among his works are:

  • Admiranda Romanarum Antiquitatum ac veteris Sculptura vestigia; 81 plates.
  • Romanae magnitudinis Monumenta; 138 plates.
  • Veteres arcus Augustorum triumphis insignes; 52 plates.
  • Colonna di Marco Aurelio, (Column of Marcus Aurelius) 78 plates.
  • Colonna traiana eretta dal Senato, e popolo romano all'imperatore Traiano (Trajan's Column) with Alfonso Ciacconi; (1673) 128 plates.
  • Pitture antiche di Roma, e del sepolcro de' Nasoni; (1702) 123 plates.
  • The Nozze Aldobrandini; (Roman 1st century Aldobrandini Wedding fresco) two sheets.
  • Le pitture antiche delle grotto di Roma; assisted by F. Bartoli; 94 plates, 1680 & 1706.
  • Veterum lucernae sepulcrales, collectae ex cavernis et specubus subterraneis, with Alexander Duke and Giovanni Pietro Bellori 1691 & 1704; 119 plates.
  • Scenes from the life of St. Peter; after Lanfranco.
  • Subjects from Raphael's Bible; 42 plates.
  • Grottesques; after Raphael; inscribed Parerya atque ornamenta in Vaticano; 43 plates.
  • Antiquissimi Virgiliani Codicis fragmenta et picturae, ex Biblioteca Vaticano;
  • Birth of the Virgin; after Albani.
  • Virgin and Child in the Clouds; after Ludovico Carracci.
  • Coriolanus and his Family and San Carlo Borromeo led by an Angel; after Annibale Carracci.
  • Daniel in the Lions' Den; after Pietro da Cortona.
  • St. John preaching; after Mola.
  • Adoration of the Magi; after Raphael; in three sheets.
  • Jupiter nursed by Amalthea; Jupiter hurling thunderbolts at Giants; Hylas carried off by Nymphs; Sophonisba before Masinissa; Continence of Scipio; after Giulio Romano.
  • St. Stephen.
  • St. Bernard enchaining the Devil; Theatre erected in St. Peter's for a Canonization; do.
  • The sepulchral Monument of Pope Urban VIII .
gollark: If you do not I WILL devise one for you.
gollark: Randomly generate one.
gollark: I agree.
gollark: Although I do have a torso.
gollark: I'm not actually a beekeeper/rogue in real life.

References

  • Bryan, Michael (1889). Walter Armstrong & Robert Edmund Graves (ed.). Dictionary of Painters and Engravers, Biographical and Critical (Volume II L-Z). York St. #4, Covent Garden, London; Original from Fogg Library, Digitized May 18, 2007: George Bell and Sons. p. 449.CS1 maint: location (link)
  • Alfredo Petrucci, «BARTOLI, Pietro Santi (Piersanti)». In: Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Vol. 6, Roma: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, 1964.
  • Mirco Modolo, Dal clivus Scauri al vicus Capitis Africae: gli affreschi della vigna Guglielmina a Roma nei disegni dei Bartoli, in Bollettino d'Arte, 8, Ottobre-dicembre 2010, pp. 1–20.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.