This page was created by Alexis Kratzer.  The last update was by Avery Freeman.

The Digital Piranesi

Another Interior View of the Villa of Maecenas at Tivoli


This view is framed by interior walls which, on the right, are darkened by repetitive shapes that are somewhat cellular in appearance and, on the left, from which vines seem to emerge in vivid chiaroscuro. Piranesi seems to evoke here, as he does elsewhere, the medieval and Renaissance notion of living stone (Zorach 118). The human life within this frame of seemingly animate walls, though, might offer a more contemporary notion of social critique. This view, titled “another internal view of the villa of Maecenas in Tivoli,” suggests that the sequence in this edition of the Opere is disordered, since the following view, titled “an internal view of the villa of Maecenas in Tivoli,” should presumably precede this “other” view. These designations have particular if underappreciated significance, as Jeanne Zarucchi has shown, in the tendency of views named “altra veduta” to emphasize “decay and corruption,” “poverty and pathos,” and “darker vision of the life that goes on amid the crumbling ruins.” The key’s demarcation of “public taverns” [taverne publiche] is perhaps a social critique of Rome’s fallen state, an indication not only of the structure’s historical function but also the habits of eighteenth-century grand tourists (Zarucchi, 368). Between this and the following view, though, there is no clear opposition in theme or composition. Instead, taken together, their successive arches and striking evocations of enclosure are a notable contrast from the preceding outdoor view of the villa. As a group, Piranesi’s views of Tivoli, John Pinto has noted, “alternate between vast vistas…. with the harsh diagonal line of a strict use of one-point perspective” and internal views, with “successive archways and alternating light and shadow” (Pinto 1995, 258). Cutting across the enclosure established by the framing walls and arches in this view is the shaft of sunlight that seems to surprise and possibly to blind the man who stands just to the left of the center of the image. (JB)


To see this image in Vedute di Roma, vol 17 of Piranesi's Opere, click here.

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