Artwork Page for The Triumph of Julius Caesar: Soldiers Carrying Vases

Details / Information for The Triumph of Julius Caesar: Soldiers Carrying Vases

The Triumph of Julius Caesar: Soldiers Carrying Vases

1593–99
(Italian, about 1558–1610)
(Italian, about 1431–1506)
Measurements
Sheet: 37 x 38.1 cm (14 9/16 x 15 in.); Matted: 58.4 x 57 cm (23 x 22 7/16 in.)
Credit Line
Catalogue raisonné
Bartsch XII.101.11 # 4 of a set of 9 (p.102)
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Commissioned by Duke Vincenzo Gonzaga, this series of chiaroscuro woodcuts reproduces Andrea Mantegna’s Triumph of Julius Caesar, painted a century earlier. The scenes imaginatively portray the triumphal procession of the renowned Roman general and consul Julius Caesar following his successful defeat of Gaul in 52 BC. Each section of the continuous frieze shows elements typical of these parades, sanctioned by the Roman Senate and described in ancient texts. The printed suite’s frontispiece features a portrait bust of Mantegna, and the text below boasts that the famous paintings attracted many viewers. People who owned sets of these woodcuts often tacked them up to create a decorative frieze. Andreani issued the prints with a sheet of classical columns that could be cut out and placed between the scenes. Two fragments of these columns, colored orange, still flank the fourth scene.
A vertically oriented print in black ink on tan and gray paper depicts a procession moving toward the right. In the foreground, men carry massive vases and urns. Long trumpets with Latin banners extend diagonally toward the upper right. A bull draped with floral garlands stands in the middle ground. Behind them, classical ruins and a circular temple sit atop a hill, rendered with fine, hatched lines and tonal shading.

The Triumph of Julius Caesar: Soldiers Carrying Vases

1593–99

Andrea Andreani, Andrea Mantegna

(Italian, about 1558–1610), (Italian, about 1431–1506)
Italy, 16th century

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