Emilio Costantini (1842–1926) was an Italian painter, a prominent art dealer, and a professor in the Istituto d'Arte di Firenze.
[2] Costantini was in regular contact with important art dealers of the time, such as Herbert P. Horne and Bernard Berenson; notably, through Berenson, he sold Raphael's Portrait of Tommaso Inghirami to Isabella Stewart Gardner in 1898.
[2] Costantini was well-regarded in London society as an artist who specialised in copies of old oil paintings.
From 1888 to 1891, he produced fourteen watercolour copies of important masterpieces, mostly Italian, for the Arundel Society.
[2] In 1887, he travelled to Viseu, Portugal, to make one such copy, of Grão Vasco's Saint Peter.