His family's social welfare situation leads him to cultivate several passions, including the violin, for which he will later compose some pieces, judged by music critics as "modern and attractive".
After graduating in 1911, they began the first projects for small villas and funerary chapels that were characterized by an innate style that only later leaned towards a more rigorous déco; in 1912 he worked at the new headquarters of the Chamber of Deputies in Rome.
The end of the War in Libya marks the occasion of his first job as a railway engineer for communication lines on the inaccessible roads between Massima and Asmara in Eritrea, spending 13 months in Africa.
In fact, in his works there are vaudeville dancers, actors and technicians on a film set, a symbol of deception and a mocking stage fiction in the days of hatred and death.
[9] He was appreciated[10] by illustrious contemporary fellow citizens such as Giuseppe Agnelli: "... these images are caressed and renewed by the Poet del Bulino with superior mastery, in a very personal way.
Hence, each panel bears the mark of a moment of his soul, although the artist, timid, and I would say disdainful, with easy effects...",[11] Gualtiero Medri:[8] "...it is necessary, however, to reach our days to find an artist who deserves, for indisputable merits, the affix of master in the art of engraving... From his hands come assisted by a master's degree in drawing, a deep knowledge of the technique, tireless site work and an exquisite sense of art...",[12] Filippo De Pisis: "...through the works that I saw of him, he showed himself to be an engraver of great technical skill and here and there also vigorous and synthetic...
Also for this reason, he could be classified as a good craftsman who respects the established rules",[13] and Mimì Quilici Buzzacchi:[14] "His mastery and technical knowledge, mixed with an eclectic style, presents a renaissance of the artistic expression of the greats of the past [15] , as also described by art critic L. Scardino: "strong chiaroscuro by Enzo Baglioni, an engraver from Ferrara who almost looks like a reincarnation of Piranesi."