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The Digital PiranesiMain MenuAboutThe Digital Piranesi is a developing digital humanities project that aims to provide an enhanced digital edition of the works of Italian illustrator Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720-1778).Works and VolumesGenres, Subjects, and ThemesBibliographyGlossary
Plate IX
12021-07-18T14:07:51-07:00Helen B. Kampmann Marodin057612e7fc4f8728b1dcdf23e7ab160b2ebfb68f2284918"The Giant Wheel"plain2021-09-07T08:25:30-07:00Helen B. Kampmann Marodin057612e7fc4f8728b1dcdf23e7ab160b2ebfb68f This plate is the simplest in terms of pictorial elements and offers very few alterations between the first and posterior states, indicating Piranesi's satisfaction with the results achieved already in the first edition. The colossal wheels that cover more than half of the illustration can be interpreted as parts of the hull of a large ship, destroyed and abandoned just like so many others throughout the Carceri. Disposed at the top of a stone portal, the hull still carried fragments of the beams that once supported the ship’s decks. Following the motif of the trophies of the previous plates, Piranesi depicted the fragments of the enormous hull as a colossal naval trophy, closing the sequence of direct references to these elements.
The changes between the editions of the late 1750s and 1761 consist, if not exclusively, to the addition of the wooden beams-like structure in the lower left of the plate. This object, in turn, be it shaped as a bracket or a crossbar, was repeatedly added to the plates of the Carceri series in the edition of 1761 and, therefore, deserves our special attention. Piranesi incorporated the piece prominently in the Title Page and in plates IV, VII, X, XIII, and XVI. He also added chunks of it in plates III, VI, VIII, XI, and XIV. The piece, already present since the first state of Plate XII, was unmistakably represented in the newly conceived plates II and V. In summary, Piranesi unquestionably attributed a great deal of symbolism to this form, which will be further explores in Plate XVI. With the nautical visual repertoire he employs along the etchings of the Carceri, including the allusions to the naumachiae, Piranesi emphasizes the magnificence of Roman engineering and architecture. These theatrical spectacles emulating historical or mythological naval battles were enacted either for entertainment or for triumphal purposes in ancient Rome. The stage set for the naumachiae was a very complex and grandiose flooded structure whose idea is, to say the least, extravagant. Even by contemporary standards, the degree of technical effort required to make an artificial giant pool to reenact naval battles is enormous. It encompassed complex systems of aqueducts and sewers to bring the water in, flood the area, and drain the water when done. Indisputably, the naumachiae demonstrated the technical capability of a sophisticated society.
With the scale of the ambiguous wheels in plate IX, Piranesi also alludes to the wooden structures that precede the construction of bridges, aqueducts, or sewers. These were among the architectural and engineering Roman achievements that fascinated Piranesi the most. His enthusiasm with promoting the extraordinary degree of development of the Roman construction technology, especially before Greek influence, is decisive to understand the Carceri.
Piranesi borrowed the concept of Roman magnificence from Livy. In Ab urbe condita libri ("Books from the Founding of the City," or simply "History of Rome"), Livy had already claimed the romana magnificentia through the examples of the temple of Capitoline Jupiter, the Circus Maximus, and the Cloaca Maxima, built as early as the sixth century BCE. This was a robust argument Piranesi employed in many of his publications in favor of Roman superiority. Additionally, he had the opportunity to witness the discovery of an underground section of the Cloaca in 1742 in Rome. The remains must have greatly impacted the young Piranesi, that produced several etchings registering his own observations of the impressive ancient sewage system.
After entering the stone portal represented in the center of this plate, Piranesi takes us to contemplate several port-like spaces in the following plates until finally ending his journey in plate XVI.
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1media/Carceri.detailINTRO.jpgmedia/Carceri.detailINTRO.jpg2021-07-18T13:04:07-07:00Helen B. Kampmann Marodin057612e7fc4f8728b1dcdf23e7ab160b2ebfb68fCarceri d'InvenzioneHelen B. Kampmann Marodin16Introduction to the Imaginary Prisonsimage_header2021-09-07T08:45:31-07:00Helen B. Kampmann Marodin057612e7fc4f8728b1dcdf23e7ab160b2ebfb68f
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12020-02-07T09:39:27-08:00Harith Kumte99279d66eba29dfb66cd2510732c5a9dd9b59c7a170. Outlet of the Cloaca Maxima into the Tiber11plain2023-03-10T17:39:38-08:00Jeanne Brittone120651dde677d5cf1fd515358b14d86eb289f11
12018-09-21T20:04:28-07:00Adiv Srinitesh Sivakumar795da21dfec143a7cb73ee1b7e122823f49b2b79The Outlet of the Cloaca Maxima into the Tiber [VIDEO]7Ostium, sive Emissarium Cloacae Macimae in Tiberiumplain2020-09-07T05:25:29-07:00Jeanne Brittone120651dde677d5cf1fd515358b14d86eb289f11
12018-09-21T21:15:04-07:00Adiv Srinitesh Sivakumar795da21dfec143a7cb73ee1b7e122823f49b2b79Resevoir of the Cloaca Maxima3Cloacae Maximae alveusplain2020-09-07T05:26:43-07:00Jeanne Brittone120651dde677d5cf1fd515358b14d86eb289f11
12021-03-29T16:10:57-07:00Avery Freemanb9edcb567e2471c9ec37caa50383522b90999cbaWall along the Tiber that secures the outlet of the Cloaca Maxima1Muro lungo la riva del Tevere per assicurazione dell'orificio della Cloaca massima�2021-03-29T16:10:57-07:00Avery Freemanb9edcb567e2471c9ec37caa50383522b90999cba