Pieter de Jode I

Pieter de Jode I

'Pieter de Jode I after painting by M Ferdinand
Birth name Pieter de Jode
Born 1570
Antwerp
Died 1634 (aged 63–64)
Antwerp
Nationality Belgium
Field Engraving
Movement Baroque

Petrus, or Pieter de Jode I (1570, Antwerp – 9 August 1634, Antwerp) was a Flemish Baroque painter and engraver.

Biography

He learned drawing and engraving first from his father, the map maker Gerard de Jode, and later from Hendrik Goltzius. His engravings of Italian master paintings became a source for Karel van Mander.[1] He travelled to Rome in 1590 where he made his engravings of Titian, Giulio Romano and Jacopo Bassano. He travelled back home and in 1599 he joined the Guild of Saint Luke in Antwerp. He made engravings after Bartholomäus Spranger, Sebastiaen Vrancx, Otto van Veen, Antoon van Dyck and Peter Paul Rubens. In 1631 he travelled to Paris.[2] He is registered as the teacher of his son Pieter de Jode II, Pieter de Bailliu, Johann Caspar Dooms, and Nicolaes Rijckmans.[2]

References

  1. ^ * Text from Karel van Mander's Schilderboeck, p.195: Noch eenen Ventura Salimbeni van Siena isser te Siena, die seer aerdighe dingen ghehetst laet van zijn handt en vindinghen uytgaen, van datum 1590. en 94. Een ander Sienees noch te Siena, laet van hem uytgaen een historie van S. Catherina van Siena, seer versierlijck geinventeert, en gesneden door Pieter de Iode van Antwerpen.
  2. ^ a b (Dutch) Pieter de Jode I entry in RKD