In 1771, following a suggestion of his patron Girolamo Zulian, he moved to Rome, where he founded a school of engraving and gained a reputation for his series of plates after the frescoes of the Raphael Rooms and Loggias in the Vatican (1770–77). Some of these plates[1] were hand-coloured by Francesco Panini, and did not necessarily reproduce the actual design or subjects of the Loggias' vaults and pilasters, but they became much in demand among visitors to Rome. Volpato made this impressive panorama of Rome based on Francesco Panini's drawings, part of the Rijksmuseum collection:
With the collaboration of Francesco Panini and Lodovico Teseo, on one hand, and, together with Pietro Bettelini, on the other hand, a series of prints after frescoes painted by Annibale Carracci in the Galleria di Palazzo Farnese, were published by Volpato between 1775 and 1777.[2][3][4]
He engraved a series of landscapes and vedute of Rome with Pietro Ducros.
Volpato was a friend of the British painter and antiquarian, Gavin Hamilton. When Volpato himself became an excavator, he supplied Hamilton with some sculptures and engravings for his Schola Italica Picturae, while Hamilton introduced him to clients interested in his findings and publications.
Volpato made excavations in Ostia (1779, with the antiquarian Thomas Jenkins), Porta San Sebastiano (1779) and Quadraro (1780); and sold sculptures to king Gustav III of Sweden (1784), to the Vatican Museums, and to the British collector, Henry Blundell. In 1788 he sold the celebrated Lante Vase to Colonel John Campbell. In 1792, in collaboration with Louis Ducros, he published a series of prints of the interiors of the new Museo Pio-Clementino.[5]
In 1785, he established a porcelain factory that made ceramic replicas of Greco-Roman originals[6] to satisfy the demand for antique art during the Neoclassic period.[7]
Ilaria Bignamini, Clare Hornsby, "Digging and Dealing in Eighteenth-Century Rome" (2010. Yale U.P.), p. 339-340
L. Melegati, "Giovanni Volpato e il cantiere romano", in Ricordi dell'antico: sculture, porcellane e arredi all'epoca del Grand Tour, ed. A. d'Agliano, L. Melegati [exhibition catalogue, Musei Capitolini, Rome] (2008), p. 101-114
F. Haskell, "The Museo Pio-Clementino in Rome and the Views by Ducros and Volpato", in Louis Ducros: Images of the Grand Tour [exhibition catalogue, Kenwood House, London] (1985), p. 36-39
C. Faccioli, "Anni ed Epistolario romano d'un grande incisore bassanese, Giovanni Volpato", in L'Urbe; 32:3 (1969), p. 18-35
H. Honour, "Statuettes after the antique: Volpato's Roman porcelain factory", in Apollo; 85 (1967 May), p. 371-373
Dacos, Nicole (2008). The Loggia of Raphael, a Vatican art treasure. Libreria Editrice Vaticana, Abbeville Press Publisher. pp. 318–320.
Marini, Giorgio; Volpato, Giovanni (1988). "Giovanni Volpato: 1735-1803" (Italian Edition). [Exhibition catalogue: Museo-Biblioteca-Archivio, Bassano del Grappa, Jan. 19-Apr. 10, 1988 and the Istituto Nazionale per la Grafica, Gabinetto Disegni e Stampi, Apr. 22-June 22, 1988]. Bassano del Grappa: Ghedina & Tassotti edit. ISBN9788876910357
^Panini, Francesco. "Résultats de la recherche". Musées d'art et d'histoire de Genève (in French). Archived from the original on 2023-04-29. Retrieved 2023-04-29.
^F. Haskell, 'The Museo Pio-Clementino in Rome and the Views by Ducros and Volpato', in Louis Ducros: Images of the Grand Tour [exhibition catalogue, Kenwood House, London] (1985), p.36-39.