This content was created by Zoe Langer.
Giovanni Alto
1 media/Villamena, Giovanni Alto _thumb.png 2020-12-22T14:43:32-08:00 Zoe Langer ef2dd00d773765a8b071cbe9e59fc8bf7c7da399 22849 1 Francesco Villamena, Portrait of Giovanni Alto on the Piazza Quirinale, 1613. Courtesy of Brown University Library plain 2020-12-22T14:43:32-08:00 Zoe Langer ef2dd00d773765a8b071cbe9e59fc8bf7c7da399This page is referenced by:
-
1
2018-11-28T15:20:11-08:00
View of St. Peter's Square and Basilica
10
Veduta della gran Piazza e Basilica di San Pietro situata ove erano anticamente il Circo e gl’ Orti di Cajo e Nerone nella Valle Vaticana
plain
2020-12-22T14:46:42-08:00
Title: Veduta della gran Piazza e Basilica di San Pietro situata ove erano anticamente il Circo e gl’Orti di Cajo e Nerone nella Valle Vaticana. Signature: Cav(alier) Piranesi F(ecit).
Title: View of St. Peter’s Square and the Basilica [situated where there was in ancient times the Circus and Gardens of Caius Cestius and Nero on the Vatican Hill] Signature: Made by the Knight Piranesi
In this third and last view of the exterior of St. Peter’s Basilica, Piranesi takes viewers even further into the piazza to directly experience the grandiose space before them. At the same time, the scena per angolo makes the sprawling square somewhat constrained. The oblique and shallow perspective employed here positions the piazza as a kind of stage and was in fact characteristic of eighteenth-century theater prints. Piranesi often adapted their compositions in order to advertise his virtuosity in perspective and architectural invention, as well as to heighten the drama of a particular scene (2016, Dixon, 250). Piranesi’s interpretation of the set design by Filippo Juvarra for the opera Teosidio il Giovane, is strikingly similar to the print above.
While the perspective is even further extended in the drawing, Piranesi captures the same frenetic tension in the relationship between the actors in the foreground and the architectural features of the piazza. In the print, the details of the central obelisk, fountain, and curve of the colonnade are fleshed out with rectilinear lines and harsh shadows. Yet, the fountains retain the sketchy quality of the drawing, capturing the movement of the water, which seems to rupture the controlled precision of the built environment. The curves and arcs of the water are depicted in white patches, exceeding the lines that articulate them, yet they are confined to the circular contour of the basin. Much like the print itself, the fountains embody the tension between nature and artifice (San Juan, 139). In a parallel manner, the undulating and illusionistic banderole on the bottom right interrupts the immersive space of the piazza, calling attention to the status of the engraving as material and visual object, as well as to Piranesi’s status as the author of its environment. In addition to bearing the title of the print, the scroll performs Piranesi’s authorship by inscribing upon it “Cav(alier). Piranesi F(ecit). [Made by the Knight Piranesi].” To the immediate left of the scroll, a figure in typical eighteenth-century garb, seems to theatrically introduce the print to viewers. His posture and gesture are reminiscent of the well-known print of the famous cicerone Giovanni Alto by Francesco Villamena.
As a go-between he mediates the experience of the piazza, its grandeur while also revealing the “ephemeral and chaotic aspects of everyday life, including its laborers, beggars, pilgrims, soldiers, sellers, and loiterers” (San Juan, 88). Indeed, such figures are on display in the foreground of the print, whose effusive gestures presume “a fascination with urban diversity” not only of the city, but also of the theatrical stage. (ZL)
To see this image in Vedute di Roma, vol 16 of Piranesi's Opere, click here.