Palazzo Borghese

Palazzo Borghese

Palazzo Borghese is the main seat of the Borghese family in Rome; it was nicknamed "il Cembalo" ("the harpsichord") due to its unusual trazezoidal groundplan; its short front ("illustration") faces the Tiber. Its "keyboard" entrance facade on the opposite end faces the Fontanella di Borghese, with a great flanking facade in Piazza Borghese and a slightly angled extension down via Borghese to the river.

Howard Hibbard demonstrated [Hibbard, "The Palazzo Borghese" (Rome:American Academy) 1962. Former attributions were to Martino Longhi the Elder, an architect who did not show such imagination and vitality elsewhere, and who was not yet in Rome in 1560-61.] that the nine-bay section of palazzo was begun in 1560/61 for Monsignor Tomasso del Giglio, whose arms remain over the door in Piazza Borghese, and he suggests that the architect was Vignola, an attribution accepted by Anthony Blunt [Reviewing Hibbard 1962 in "The Burlington Magazine" 105 No. 729 (December 1963), p 566.] and considered conclusive by James S. Ackerman [Reviewing Hibbar 1962 in "The Art Bulletin" 45.2 (June 1963), pp. 163-164,] followed by other scholars since, with more or less reduced interventions by Longhi. Before Tomasso del Giglio died in 1578, the façade and the unique but undocumented double-columned two-storey arcade of the courtyard had been established, a conceptual scheme of Vignola's, Hibbard suggested, but which was carried out in 1575-78 by Martino Longhi the Elder. Longhi was retained by Pedro Cardinal Deza, who bought the property in 1587, but seems to have done little more than continue the great courtyard.

Cardinal Camillo Borghese purchased the structure in 1604 and assembled further adjacent properties toward the river. [This was a sixteenth-century structure owned by the Farnese, accounting for the kink in the facade.] When the Cardinal became Pope Paul V in 1605, he gave the palazzo to his brothers but continued to commission the work, which was carried forward vigorously, at first by Flaminio Ponzio, and completed after Ponzio's death in 1613 by Carlo Maderno and Giovanni Vasanzio. Ponzio stretched the square courtyard to five by seven bays and was responsible for the secondary façade with two further balconies on the Via di Ripetta, facing the Tiber River.

In 1671-76 Carlo Rainaldi added new features for Prince Giovan Battista Borghese; the most extensive changes were made on the newly raised ground floor of the long wing extending towards the Tiber, ending with river views, which the Borghese found the most congenial dwelling spaces: Rainaldi added the columnar loggia to Ponzi's end facade ("illustration, right"), and on the interior a richly stuccoed oval chapel, and the narrow barrel-vaulted "galleria", the highly-charged Cortonesque decorative details of which were designed by Giovan Francesco Grimaldi (1606-1680). [This transverse "galleria" was not the former Picture Gallery in the palazzo. (Howard Hibbard, "Palazzo Borghese Studies - II: The Galleria" "The Burlington Magazine" 104 No. 706 (January 1962), pp. 9-20.)]

The main façades of three stories with two mezzanines inserted between them, heach has amajestic portal flanked by columns and a balcony. Through one portale, a view across the courtyard gives a perspective view to one of the wall-fountains in the garden beyond.

The edifice has a magnificent inner court of high-arched shape, surrounded by 96 granite columns and decorated with statues, and a nympheum and other features, as well as an enclosed garden with three niche wall-fountains built to designs by Johann Paul Schor finished by Rainaldi, for Prince Giovan Battista Borghese and finished in 1673. [Howard Hibbard, "Palazzo Borghese Studies I: The Garden and Its Fountains" "The Burlington Magazine" 100 No. 663 (June 1958), pp. 204-212, 215.] The court was described as "one of the most spectacular existing, not only in Rome" [Zeppegno, cited in [http://www.romasegreta.it/campo_marzio/palazzoborghese.htm] .] .

The secondary façade on the square of the "Fontanella Borghese" is faces another Borghese palace, rebuilt in the 16th century by Scipio Borghese to house the lesser members of the family, the stables and the servants.

Palazzo Borghese was the original seat of the family's art collection, with works by Raphael, Titian and many others, transferred in 1891 to the Galleria Borghese in Villa Borghese.

Notes

__NOTOC__

References

*cite book|first=Heinz-Joachim|last=Fischer|title=Rom. Zweieinhalb Jahrtausende Geschichte, Kunst und Kultur der Ewigen Stadt|publisher=DuMont Buchverlag|location=Cologne|year=2001
*cite book|first=Anton|last=Henze|title=Kunstführer Rom|publisher=Philipp Reclam|location=Stuttgart|year=1994
*cite book|first=Claudio|last=Rendina|title=Enciclopedia di Roma|publisher=Newton Compton|location=Rome|year=1999
*Hibbard, Howard. (1962) "The Palazzo Borghese" (Rome: American Academy) Biographies of Longhi and Ponzio are in appendices.
*Touring Club Italiano, (1965)"Roma e Dintorni"

ee also

*Villa Borghese
*Galleria Borghese

External links

* [http://www.romeartlover.it/Vasi69.htm Page with ancient print of the palace]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Palazzo Borghese — Fassade des Palazzo an der Piazza Borghese Der Palazzo Borghese, nach der Form seines Grundrisses auch „il Cembalo Borghese“ genannt, war die städtische Wohnung der Familie Borghese. Es ist eines der prachtvollsten Gebäude Roms. Kardinal Camillo… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Borghese —   [bɔr geːse], italienische Adelsfamilie, die ursprünglich aus Siena stammte und sich im 16. Jahrhundert in Rom niederließ. Ihren Reichtum und den Fürstentitel verdankt sie Camillo Borghese, der 1605 als Paul V. Papst wurde. Sein von ihm… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Borghese [1] — Borghese. Diesen Namen führen zwei Bauwerke in u. bei Rom. Das ältere, der Palazzo B., führt seinen Namen vom Papst Paul V. (s. Borghese 5), der ihn, nachdem der Bau gegen Ende des 16. Jahrh. von Lunghi dem Ältern für den Cardinal Dezza begonnen …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Borghēse — Borghēse, Villa, in Rom, unmittelbar vor der Porta del Popolo, bis 1902 Besitzung der fürstlichen Familie Borghese, mit ausgedehnten, über 1 qkm großen Parkanlagen, einst weltberühmt wegen der Schätze antiker Kunst, vom Kardinal Scipio Borghese,… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Palazzo Pallavicini-Rospigliosi — The Palazzo Pallavicini Rospigliosi is a palace in Rome. It was built by the Borghese family on the Quirinal Hill; its footprint occupies the site where the ruins of the baths of Constantine stood, whose remains still are part of the basement of… …   Wikipedia

  • Palazzo Corsini — Front view The Palazzo Corsini is a prominent late baroque palace in Rome, erected for the Corsini family between 1730 1740 as an elaboration of the prior building on the site, a 15th century villa of the Riario family, based on designs of… …   Wikipedia

  • House of Borghese — Borghese is the surname of a family of Italian noble and papal background, originating in Siena as the Borghese or Borghesi, where they came to prominence in the 13th century holding official offices under the commune . The head of the family,… …   Wikipedia

  • Borghese Hermaphroditus — The Borghese Hermaphroditus represents a subject and sculpture type that was much repeated in Hellenistic times and in ancient Rome, to judge from the number of versions that have chanced to survive. It derives its name from its best known… …   Wikipedia

  • Palazzo Doria-Pamphili — Der Palazzo Doria Pamphili Der Palazzo Doria Pamphilj ist ein Palast in Rom. Er liegt zwischen der Via del Corso, der Piazza del Collegio Romano, der Via della Gatta und der Via del Plebiscito. Geschichte Das Anwesen gehörte ursprünglich der… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Palazzo Rospigliosi — Giuseppe Vasis Darstellung des Palazzo Rospigliosi Der Palazzo Rospigliosi ist ein Palast in der Via XXIV Maggio 43 in Rom. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Geschichte …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”