The Piranesi Vase
The Piranesi Vase
Published 2016-12-21T16:02:49+00:00
This Piranesi Vase originates from the workshop of Giovanni Battista Piranesi. This composite work was created between 1720-1778. It was assembled of an ancient Roman funerary urn and two double hermae, while the rest is recently added.
According to legend, this vase was found in the ruins of the Villa of Emperor Hadrian in Tivoli. Actually, the vase was skilfully composed of various fragments at the workshop of Giovanni Battista Piranesi, a famous Italian engraver and antiquarian. The body of the vase was formed of an Ancient Rome puteal, a stone barrier around a well dating back to the era of the Flavian emperors (third quarter of the 1st century AD). It has the following new parts: a cover and a rim, numerous insets on the handles, a mask of a Silenus and a pedestal. The bottom of the vase, the handles shaped like vine sprouts and the bases of the handles shaped like a Silenus protome were skilfully chosen by Piranesi and did not belong to a single object. This fact is clearly seen, for example, in the way the fragment with a protome is cut into the bottom. These fragments can be attributed to neo-Attic craftsmen and are dating to the 1st century BC. If the fragments were indeed found in Tivoli, they would have belonged to the decoration of rich villas before the time of Emperor Hadrian.
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Date published | 21/12/2016 |
Time to do | 350 - 700 minutes |
Material Quantity | 42 |
Dimensions | 96×78×95 |
Technology | FDM |
Title | The Piranesi Vase |
Date | late 18th Century |
Dimension | h. 125 cm |
Accession | ГР-3010 (A.110) |
Period | Baroque |
Medium | Marble |
Credit | Found at Hadrian's Villa near Tivoli. Acquired in 1850 from the collection of John Lyde-Brown |
Place | State Hermitage Museum |