le Arti di Piranesi architetto, incisore, antiquario, vedutista, designer
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le Arti di Piranesi architetto, incisore, antiquario, vedutista, designer
le Arti di Piranesi architetto, incisore, antiquario, vedutista, designer Youthful output and Venetian heritage In 1740 the twenty-year-old Piranesi went to Rome in the retinue of the Venetian ambassador Francesco Venier. In Venice he had received a solid training in engineering and technical matters while an apprentice with his engineer uncle Matteo Lucchesi and the architect Giovanni Antonio Scalfarotto. In Rome he had probably hoped to start out on a promising architectural career. In fact the recurrent inscription in capital letters in the frontispiece of his books of prints is «Architetto Veneziano» or «Architectus Venetus». The remains of classical antiquity and the ruins of Rome, half buried and on a much lager scale compared to the more modest later buildings, were a revelation. Piranesi developed a new conception of time and its passage in the metamorphosis of stone as it is worn down and perishes. Despite support from the Venetian constructer, Nicola Giobbe, Piranesi did little to further his career as an architect. Giobbe was the dedicatee of Piranesi's first book of etchings, the Prima Parte di Architetture, e Prospettive (1743). In the dedication, Piranesi laconically complains that it was impossible to emulate the magnificence of ancient buildings, «since it cannot not be hoped that an architect of our day will effectively be able to build», especially because of the blindness of «those who should be patrons of this very noble skill». So all that was left for an architect to do was «to explain his own ideas in drawings» and produce prints of them, which was the most effective means of disseminating models, ideas and taste. As an architect working with acid and paper, Piranesi enjoyed the kind of freedom and imaginative outlook which characterised the work of his artist and sculptor colleagues. Having been taught etching by Carlo Zucchi in Venice, Piranesi now learned engraving from the Sicilian artist Giuseppe Vasi. Piranesi’s typically Venetian sensibility in his gentle pictorial approach, in which the values of mass are dissolved in the tonal relations and in chiaroscuro, led Vasi to remark: «you are too much of a painter, my friend, to become an engraver.» During two crucial stays in Venice from 1744 to 1747, Piranesi further developed his visionare temperament. Visits to Giambattista Tiepolo’s workshop, where he could admire and vie with the Venetian master’s etchings entitled Scherzi di fantasia led to the four Grotteschi. Fluid lines and free handling – distinctive features of Venetian Rococo – were also to characterise the contemporary etchings in the Antichità Romane de’ Tempi della Repubblica (1748). Piranesi left for Rome again in 1747 as an agent for the engraver and print dealer Giuseppe Wagner. He was never to return to Venice. He was obsessed with the idea of rivalling the grandeur of the ancient Romans, which he had studied by reading Vitruvius and Titus Livy: «I need great ideas and I believe that if I were commissioned to design a new universe, I would have the mad courage to undertake it».
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