Raffaello Sanzio Morghen

He received his earliest instructions from his father, himself an engraver; but, to obtain more advanced training, he was placed as a pupil under the celebrated Giovanni Volpato.

He assisted this master in engraving the famous pictures of Raphael in the Vatican City, and the print which represents the miracle of Bolsena is inscribed with his name.

He married Volpato's daughter, Domenica, in 1782,[1] and, being invited to Florence to engrave the masterpieces of the Florentine Gallery, he moved there with his wife in the same year.

His reputation now became so great as to induce the artists of Florence to recommend him to the Grand Duke as a fit person to engrave the Last Supper of Leonardo da Vinci; apart, however, from the dilapidated state of the picture itself, the drawing made for Morghen was unworthy of the original, and the print, in consequence, although an admirable production, fails to convey a correct idea of the style and merit of Leonardo.

Other than those mentioned above, the most notable include his engravings of Raphael's Transfiguration, a Mary Magdalene by Murillo, a Head of the Saviour by Leonardo, Guido Reni's Aurora, Poussin's A Dance to the Music of Time and The Flight into Egypt, Domenichino's Archery Contest of Diana and her Nymphs, Van Dyck's Portrait of Francesco de Moncada and anonymous portraits of Dante, Petrarch, Leonardo, Ariosto, Tasso and other famous men.

Giovanni Boccaccio by Morghen, after Vinzenzo Gozzoni
The grave of Raffaello Morghen, Santa Croce, Florence
Morghen's engraving of Anthony van Dyck ’s equestrian portrait of Francisco de Moncada, Marquess of Aytona, dated 1793
"View of the grotto of Neptune in Tivoli", engraving (c.1780-1784) by Raffaello Morghen , after Louis Ducros