Located in the vast Villa Borghese grounds just outside the Pinciana Gate (Via Veneto), the Gallery is the creation of the Cardinal Nipote (nephew) Scipione Cafarelli Borghese (1576-1633) whose uncle was Camillo Borghese known as Pope Paul V (1605-21). The Gallery is largely unchanged today with its original core still intact. The building is built according to the suburban architectural model of the Classical age, it is conceived from the beginning as a microcosm of every form of art. The Borghese family used it as a seat for its diplomatic enterprises and to allow Cardinal Scipione's passion for collecting. The enormous park of the Villa Borghese was acquired by the purchase of many parcels of land just outside the Aurelian Walls of Rome prior to 1609. Originally vineyards, he went about transforming it all into formal gardens in the manner of the 17th century.
Entrance to the park of the Villa Borghese at the Aurelian walls and the Pinciana Gate.
Entrance to the Gallery is by reservation only and tickets must be purchased in advance, often days ahead. The wealth of the collection is overwhelming for any visitor, the opulence is over the top, it conveys to the visitor the image of the power and the wealth of the Borghese Family. Many artists of the time came under the patronage of the Borghese Family and of Pope Paul V, Bernini and Caravaggio to name two.
Galleria Borghese on a summer day, facade as it has been since 1903.
If you visit the Borghese Gallery take an audio guide, it is well worth it. It will tell you not only the story of the collection but also how Cardinal Scipione went about acquiring the works, he used threats, bullying, prison and the power of his uncle the Pope to get what he wanted. Given that Rome came within the rule of the Papal States at the time, the wishes of a person like Cardinal Scipione were nothing less than direct orders to the people under him. The position of Cardinal Nipote was basically the number two of the Holy See. It also gave him enormous wealth and unlimited funds to buy just about any art work he wanted.
While visiting I learned that several of the Caravaggio's were given to Cardinal Scipione, two of them, the boy with the fruit basket and the Bacchus malato were in the house of Cesare D'arpino, the teacher of Caravaggio. Cardinal Scipione had him arrested on the pretext that he had ammunition and prohibited weapons in his house, Scipione threw him in jail and Cesare D'arpino faced a possible death sentence. However if he was willing to give up the paintings the Cardinal wanted, all could be forgiven and forgotten. He gave the paintings to the Cardinal and all ended well for everyone concerned. The same thing happened to another painter Dominichino who had painted a figure of the Goddess Diana for Cardinal Aldobrandini. Cardinal Scipione used his position to get that painting.
the sick Bacchus, a self-portrait of Caravaggio at 31. He will be dead by the age of 37.
Boy with the basket of fruits. His name was Mario, a Sicilian from Syracusa and he was a close friend of Michealangelo Merisi Caravaggio
The inside decoration of the Gallery today is the work of another Borghese, Marc Antonio Borghese who in the period 1776-1800 had the intricate colored marble in-laid floors installed and all the ceilings painted with allegorical scenes of ancient mythology, the walls are also decorated with grotesque designs, various marble and other rich decorations all this to enhance the already rich furnishings and the wealth of the art collections.
The Gallery is also used to present as is the case now other collections, at this time there is an exhibit of 60 works by Lucas Cranach the Elder, the master of Northern European Renaissance Art. So one can compare Italian Renaissance with German Renaissance art, it makes for a too rich exhibit, the brain overloads quickly with such sensory stimulation. The works on display are priceless and unique, security is tight, visitors must check before entering all bags including ladies handbags, no food, no drinks allowed, no cameras, etc... There are lots of guards around, mostly in civilian clothes so they can be more discreet, only a small badge identifies them as staff.
Gallery Borghese entrance from the park
Despite the crowds initially at the entrance door, all in all I found that the visit goes very smoothly, quietly, people speak softly. You are given 2 hours to visit the museum but usually after one hour most visitor on the scheduled visit have already left, leaving an almost empty museum to oneself to contemplate the works of art at leisure until the next group is scheduled to enter.
Detail of the Villa Borghese Park with the towers of the Villa Medici
Once the visit completed you exit unto the beautiful gardens and the splendor of the sight continues to accompany you. The museum is not a building by itself but is surrounded by two secret gardens of rare plants and flowers of the period of Cardinal Scipione (open only to pre-arranged escorted tours) and an imposing aviary once housing rare exotic birds as was also the fashion of the 17th century in Italy. Cardinal Scipione wanted a complete Theater of the Universe, a collection of wonders. The Villa Borghese was open to the public in 1903 but it is really only since 1997 that we are able to see it in the splendor of the time of Cardinal Scipione.
I got the book on the different works of art in the collection, there are so many it is difficult to remember all the details. I find that being surrounded by such beauty is very relaxing and transports you to another world, the classical age, which appeals to me, I also learned about the secret gardens and their history.
I can think of Tivoli and the gardens of the Cardinal d'Este a UNESCO site with its water organ playing music of the Renaissance and of other such great garden in Italy that we have visited. Such wondrous places all.
Showing posts with label borghese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label borghese. Show all posts
Wednesday, 5 January 2011
Borghese Gallery, Rome
Labels:
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Bernini,
borghese,
Caravaggio,
classical art,
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Sunday, 15 August 2010
Legacy of Augustus
Today we celebrate in Italy a holiday which had its origin in the time of Augustus, first Emperor of Rome, a fertility feast which was part of the political program of Augustus to augment the population of Rome. Christians then took this most popular feast and gave it a make over, fertility turns to Virgin Mary, who is the Christian Venus or Minerva or both.
Ferie (Feast) of August, FerrAgosto, the Feast of the Virgin Mary ascending into Heaven upon her death. In Napoleonic times, the 15 August was Saint Napoleon I.
The French invaded Italy in the pursuit of Revolutionary ideals to abolish the superstitions of the Roman Catholic Church and most religious holidays were modified to fit a more modern agenda, as the saying went, War conquers Peace. In keeping with the general idea of the prestige of France, Napoleon wanted to do away with the influence of the Pope over life in Catholic Europe, Napoleon had Pope Pius VII arrested and carted off to Paris, to live under house arrest. He was a modernizer, his era was one of confrontation of the old order of the Princes in all Europe against that of the will of the people under the direction of one man.
Napoleon was all too aware of his humble origins, so he married his sister Pauline into the Borghese family, who is remembered for her naked pose immortalized in marble reclining as a Roman empress. The Borghese an ancient and powerful family, with at the time one of the most prestigious art collection in Europe, was for the Bonaparte family a prize catch.
His son l’Aiglon was created at birth King of Rome and the Bonaparte family palace is on Piazza Venezia in Rome between the Palace of Prince Doria Pamphilij and Prince Colona, good company all around.
Upon Napoleon’s exile to Elba and then St-Helen, the popes were quick to do away with all modern things and bring back the holiday to the original idea, but the deed was done and Italians had other ideas and despite the Popes repression and persecution of the general population, the holiday had taken on a different meaning. By 1860 unified Italy turned the holiday progressively to one of vacation and leisure for the whole family. August becoming a month of vacation, everything is closed and everyone goes to the beach, the countryside, the mountains, even if you live in the countryside you go on vacation somewhere with the family. No one in business would think of being open during FerrAgosto. Thus we find ourselves in Pesaro on the beach. Though this year because of the financial crisis in Italy, the beach is quiet, restaurants are not so busy, but the sun is shining and we are enjoying a large glass of Proseco.
Buon FerrAgosto a Tutti!
Ferie (Feast) of August, FerrAgosto, the Feast of the Virgin Mary ascending into Heaven upon her death. In Napoleonic times, the 15 August was Saint Napoleon I.
The French invaded Italy in the pursuit of Revolutionary ideals to abolish the superstitions of the Roman Catholic Church and most religious holidays were modified to fit a more modern agenda, as the saying went, War conquers Peace. In keeping with the general idea of the prestige of France, Napoleon wanted to do away with the influence of the Pope over life in Catholic Europe, Napoleon had Pope Pius VII arrested and carted off to Paris, to live under house arrest. He was a modernizer, his era was one of confrontation of the old order of the Princes in all Europe against that of the will of the people under the direction of one man.
Napoleon was all too aware of his humble origins, so he married his sister Pauline into the Borghese family, who is remembered for her naked pose immortalized in marble reclining as a Roman empress. The Borghese an ancient and powerful family, with at the time one of the most prestigious art collection in Europe, was for the Bonaparte family a prize catch.
His son l’Aiglon was created at birth King of Rome and the Bonaparte family palace is on Piazza Venezia in Rome between the Palace of Prince Doria Pamphilij and Prince Colona, good company all around.
Upon Napoleon’s exile to Elba and then St-Helen, the popes were quick to do away with all modern things and bring back the holiday to the original idea, but the deed was done and Italians had other ideas and despite the Popes repression and persecution of the general population, the holiday had taken on a different meaning. By 1860 unified Italy turned the holiday progressively to one of vacation and leisure for the whole family. August becoming a month of vacation, everything is closed and everyone goes to the beach, the countryside, the mountains, even if you live in the countryside you go on vacation somewhere with the family. No one in business would think of being open during FerrAgosto. Thus we find ourselves in Pesaro on the beach. Though this year because of the financial crisis in Italy, the beach is quiet, restaurants are not so busy, but the sun is shining and we are enjoying a large glass of Proseco.
Buon FerrAgosto a Tutti!
Labels:
borghese,
ferie italia,
ferragosto,
Napoleon,
pesaro,
popes
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