Ugo da Carpi
Italian
Probably in late 1517 Ugo moved to Rome and sought work in the thriving print industry surrounding Raphael’s studio. Nearly all his subsequent chiaroscuro prints, in three to five blocks, reflect the broad massing of colour areas found in the frescoes and monochrome paintings of Raphael’s circle, as well as the planes of tone increasingly used by engravers to interpret them. Ugo’s main contribution to the chiaroscuro woodcut, therefore, was stylistic: the abandonment of closed contours and linear crosshatching in the key-block for strokes of emphasis and massed shadows, and in his tone-blocks the transformation of shapes into flat planes and silhouettes (see fig.). By 1518, the date of a copyright granted him by the Vatican, he was fully in control of his medium, as can be seen in such prints as David Slaying Goliath (b. 26, 8) and Ananias Struck Dead (b. 46, 27), and was acting as his own printer. Perhaps his most remarkable work, with its simple, stylized background, is Aeneas Fleeing Troy with Anchises and Ascanius (b. 104, 12), also dated 1518. Ugo must have begun work not long after this on woodcut typefaces for Lodovico Arrighi’s La operina di Lodovico Vicentino da imparare di scrivere littera cancellarescha (Venice, 1522–3); in 1525, after a dispute with Arrighi, Ugo published another edition, with newly cut blocks. The same year he compiled, cut and published his Thesauro de’scrittori, a similar treatise on writing.
After the Sack of Rome in 1527, Ugo moved to Bologna, where, according to Vasari, he cut his masterpiece, the magnificent Diogenes (b. 100, 10) after Parmigianino, or perhaps after Gian Jacopo Caraglio’s engraving (b. 61) of the subject. Ugo’s editions of his woodcuts are of high quality, usually printed in subdued graduated greens or blues, apart from the striking green and gold contrasts of the Diogenes. Numerous chiaroscuro woodcuts after Parmigianino and others have been attributed to him, despite their relatively superficial resemblance to his 14 documented works, and it is often assumed that he supervised a workshop.
Jan Johnson. "Carpi, Ugo da." In Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online, http://www.oxfordartonline.com.proxy.lib.fsu.edu/subscriber/article/grove/art/T014316 (accessed April 10, 2012).
Person TypeIndividual
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