|
|
|
| |
You are here:
Home » Monuments » Monument
Monument
| |
 ALTEMPS PALACE (Museum)In the 17th December 1997, a double event has been celebrated in Rome: the end of the works of repair of Palazzo Altemps, lasted fifteen years, a renaissance palace in the center of Rome, and the reopening to the public of the beautiful collection Ludovisi. A legendary collection this of the Boncompagni Ludovisi princes, families of popes and cardinals who keep in the rooms and gardens of their beautiful roman house a multitude of ancient statues; a crowd of Gods, fauns, satyrs, ninphes, athletes and warriors.
Works that for ages have represented a typical example of the ancient beauty, copied with personal reconstructions and audacious repairs, by greats artists, as Bernini.
In the 1901 Boncompagni princes putted up to sale their collection. Italian State bought only 96 of the 460 sculptures, so the collection was dispersed and the statues were separated in different museums.
After arranging temporarily the statues in the Bath Museum, closed from a decade, now , at last, works have found, in Altemps Palace, a seat worthy of their rank.
Statues have been located according to a precise standard: that is restoring scenes of the renaissance and baroque Rome which was adorned by those marble groups.
They tried to stick closely to the sixteenth-century taste, integrating the statues where the Altemps had their collection.
The statues were almost all of roman age. However many were on Greek style, so, for the sixteenth-seventeenth century learned men, who didn't do many distinction between originals and copies, the collection was the symbol of beauty in the ancient Greece.
Among the masterpieces displayed, we remind the Ludovisi throne, one of the most famous piece in the collection, it shows Venere's birth, and also, the famous group of Oreste and Elektra, embracing and saying goodbye to each other, milestone for entire generations of sculptors, so as Ares Ludovisi, called "the most beautiful Mars of the ancient times" by the famous archaeologist Winkelmann.
Behind the brightness of the sculptures and paintings is hidden a tragedy that left to Altemps Palace the fame of a damned place.
Cardinal Altemps made the mistake to give in marriage his son Roberto with one of the Orsini, a family in hatred to the pope Sisto V, who in revenge, accused Roberto of adultery, and cut off his head.
As a memory, Roberto's son, ordered to paint in the chapel of the palace a great fresco which reproduced the father decapitation, so that the torture couldn't be forgotten.
Visiting Altemps Palace, italians and foreigners, have a unique experience, it's a not to be missed appointment with art and culture of all time.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|