This content was created by Zoe Langer.
Vatican Interior Detail 3
1 media/Vatican Interior Detail 3_thumb.png 2021-02-02T05:46:13-08:00 Zoe Langer ef2dd00d773765a8b071cbe9e59fc8bf7c7da399 22849 1 plain 2021-02-02T05:46:13-08:00 Zoe Langer ef2dd00d773765a8b071cbe9e59fc8bf7c7da399This page is referenced by:
-
1
2018-11-28T15:22:30-08:00
Interior view of St. Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican
15
Veduta interna della Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano
plain
2021-02-02T06:01:34-08:00
Title: Veduta interna della Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano Signature: Piranesi fecit Signature 2: Presso l’Autore a Strada Felice nel Palazzo Tomati vicino alla Trinità de’monti
Title: Interior View of St. Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican Signature: Made by Piranesi Signature 2: Published by the Author in the Strada Felice in Palazzo Tomati near Trinità de Monti.
Stark contrasts between light and shadow, oblique perspective, and wildly gesticulating figures imbue the scene of St. Peter’s interior with spatial depth and elevated drama. The shadows of the tall, fluted pilasters form a zebra type pattern on the ground, which breaks up the space into segments enhancing the perspectival precision of the foreground. Figures seem perfectly positioned, as though on a grid, reflecting the classically ordered architecture of the nave. Indeed, Piranesi dwarfs Bernini’s famous Baldacchino in the crossing to make the interior appear larger. By using two perspectives for the foreground and background, Piranesi lengthens the height of the center, such that only a sliver of Michelangelo’s soaring dome can be glimpsed. Gesturing figures (see below) additionally draw the eye upward to the ornate architectural ornament that overwhelms the eye, almost as much as the vastness of the space. There is a notable difference in the definition of the shadows in the foreground, particularly in the dark hue of the arches and robust barrel vault, created by deep incisions into the copperplate. These are visible in the clear repetition of long solid rectilinear lines of the architrave, pilasters, and interior floor, revealing Piranesi’s etching technique.
In contrast, sketchy, almost painterly, strokes suffuse the apse with a soft light. The side chapels are depicted in the same way, with shallow barely etched lines. With just a few strokes, figures almost disappear into the light, creating a sense of profound depth.
Piranesi puts the full range and visual impact of the etching medium on display, especially when compared to the flatness of the same view of St. Peter’s by contemporary vedutista Panini, seen here. The visual emphasis of Piranesi’s engraving is reinforced by the lack of annotations both in this and in the following view. Etching itself could be considered an additional subject in these views, in which the artist plays with the drama of light, shadow, and depth.
To see this image in Vedute di Roma, vol 16 of Piranesi's Opere, click here.