Luca Ciamberlano (born circa 1580) was an Italian painter and engraver of the Baroque period.
From 1599 to 1641 he resided at Rome,[1] where he executed a great number of plates from his own designs, as well as after the works of the most celebrated Italian painters, in the style of Agostino Carracci.
[2] He codified and engraved Carracci's teaching system in a work published in Rome in 1626 by Pietro Stefanoni, called Scuola perfetta per imparare a disegnare tutto il corpo umano.
[5] He created a nine-part series of engravings depicting the Passion of Christ, dated 1621 and probably published by Johannes Eillarts.
[1] They were entirely executed with the graver, which he handled with neatness and intelligence; his drawing of the figure is tolerably correct.