Maso Finiguerra (born 1426, Florence [Italy]—died 1464, Florence) was a Renaissance goldsmith, engraver, draftsman, and designer, known for his work in niello, a type of decorative metalwork, and as one of the first major Italian printmakers.
Finiguerra is believed to have worked as a young man with Lorenzo Ghiberti; he later associated himself with the Florentine artist Antonio Pollaiuolo. His own style reflects theirs; in fact, it is believed that Finiguerra engraved many of Pollaiuolo’s designs during a possible period of collaboration from 1459 to 1464. None of his productions as a goldsmith is known, save perhaps the “Thewalt Cross” (c. 1464), decorated with niello plaques that may have been designed by him. He had been producing nielli, metal objects decorated with engraved designs filled with black enamel-like sulfur alloys, before 1450. Finiguerra frequently preserved his designs for niello by making sulfur casts of the engraved silver ground. He also made niello prints, which are impressions from engraved silver on paper. Examples of his sulfur casts and niello prints are still in existence.
From the niello print it was only a step to the copperplate print, which he produced shortly after 1460. Though he did not invent copperplate engraving, Finiguerra remained the great popularizer of the new medium in Italy.