Nicolas Beatrizet

Ganymede, after Michelangelo.

Nicolas Béatrizet (or Beatrizet, or Beatricetto) was 16th century French engraver, working in Rome.

Life

Béatrizet was born at Luneville in or before 1520. From his style it has been conjectured that he was a scholar of Ghisi, and of Agostino Veneziano de Musis. From 1540 to 1560 he engraved under the direction of Michelangelo. He died at Rome after 1560.[1]

Joseph Strutt believed that the importance of Béatrizet's works lay rather in the fact that some of them were unique records of pictures by some of the greatest artists, rather than their inherent quality. He wrote that "to me they seem to want any requisite, that a fine engraving ought to possess, namely, drawing, character, effect, and mechanical execution".[2]

Works

He usually signed his plates with the letters "N. B. L. F.". Their number is considerable, but most of them are included in the following list:[1]

Portraits

Religious subjects

Secular and mythological subjects

The fall of Phaeton, after Michelangelo, ca. 1542.

References

  1. 1 2 Bryan,1886-9
  2. Strutt, Joseph (1786). "Niccolo Beatrici". A Biographical Dictionary Containing All the Engravers, From the Earliest Period of the Art of Engraving to the Present Day. 1. London: Robert Faulder. p. 72– 3.

This article incorporates text from the article "BEATRIZET, Nicolas" in Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers by Michael Bryan, edited by Robert Edmund Graves and Sir Walter Armstrong, an 1886–1889 publication now in the public domain.

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