
Baccio Baldini
Cultural Positioning
Authority Records (1)
Field Verification (6 fields)
- Is PublishedAuto Publish· 100%✓
- Birth yearWikidata· 92%
- Death yearWikidata· 92%
- NationalityWikidata· 92%
- Primary mediumWikidata· 92%
- BiographyWikipedia· 88%
Source Registry (1)
- WikidataTier 1 · Institutional85%
Why this artist matters now
Baccio Baldini was an Italian goldsmith and engraver of the Renaissance, active in his native Florence. All that is known of Baldini's life, apart from the date of his burial in Florence, is what Vasari says of him: that Baldini was a goldsmith and pupil of Maso Finiguerra, the Florentine goldsmith who was, according to Vasari's incorrect claim, the inventor of engraving. Vasari says Baldini based all of his works on designs by Sandro Botticelli because he lacked disegno himself. Today Baldini is best remembered for his collaboration with Botticelli on the first printed Dante in 1481, where it is believed the painter supplied the drawings for Baldini to turn into engravings, but it does not seem to be the case that all his work was after Botticelli. He has long been attributed with a number of other engravings as the leading practitioner of the Florentine Fine Manner of engraving, this rather tentatively; he is often given a "workshop" or "circle" to ease uncertainty.
Source: Wikidata · Trust score: 85% · Updated 16d ago
Taste overlap and adjacency
Artworks (12)
Artwork sources (3)
- Art Institute Chicago7 published7 img
- Cleveland Museum of Art5 published5 img
- + 1 more source · 2 catalogued, not yet published







