Artwork Page for Eighteen Views of Rome: The Piazza Farnese (recto); Cartouche (verso)

Details / Information for Eighteen Views of Rome: The Piazza Farnese (recto); Cartouche (verso)

Eighteen Views of Rome: The Piazza Farnese (recto); Cartouche (verso)

1664
(Flemish, c. 1640-c. 1720)
Culture
Flanders
Measurements
Sheet: 38.7 x 49 cm (15 1/4 x 19 5/16 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Flemish artist Lieven Cruyl made a number of drawings of emblematic vistas of Rome for the Roman publisher Giovanni Battista de Rossi, of which ten were published as etchings in 1666. The Piazza Farnese features architecture designed by Michelangelo, who completed the Palazzo Farnese after the death of its original designer, Antonio da Sangallo, in 1546. His main contribution was the third story and the significantly protruding cornice at the top of the facade, which dramatically hangs over the front of the building, like sculpture.
Rendered in muted brown, gray, and blue tones, side-by-side views show the front and back of a horizontal ink and wash drawing. On the left, a three-story palace and fountain stand in a flooded square, creating mirrored reflections. Two figures wait in the foreground below lines of text. On the right, the reverse reveals a central vertical crease, faint bleed-through of the architecture, and light markings including a small circular stamp.

Eighteen Views of Rome: The Piazza Farnese (recto); Cartouche (verso)

1664

Lievin Cruyl

(Flemish, c. 1640-c. 1720)
Flanders

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