Horizontal Landscape with the remains of the Nymphaeum, mistakenly identified as the Temple of Minerva Medica in Rome, from the series 'Ruinarum variarum fabricarum delineationes pictoribus caeterisque id genus artificibus multum utiles'

Lambert Suavius Netherlandish
Publisher Gerard de Jode Netherlandish

Not on view

Horizontal plate with a depiction of the remains of a Nymphaeum, historically mistaken for the Temple of Minerva Medica in Rome. The building is depicted as seen from the South, from what is now the Via Giovanni Giolitti. Its foundations are partially burried and the building is covered in plants. The dome of the building is more complete in this depiction than in its modern-day state of preservation. This is congruous with other sixteenth and seventeenth depictions of the building, suggesting that this depiction if based on an in situ obervation of the structure.

'Ruinarum variarum fabricarum delineationes pictoribus caeterisque id genus artificibus multum utiles' is a print series published by Gerard de Jode, containing depictions of buildings from Classical Antiquity, set in stylized landscapes. The plates in the series can be divided in two groups: seventeen plates are landscape scenes, which contain ruines of identifiable buildings. Fifteen plates stand out from these atmospheric landscapes, and can be identified as close (sometimes reversed) copies after an Italian print series, previously attriputed to the Master G. A. with the Caltrop, and first published in Rome between 1530 and 1550. The prints also depict buildings from Roman Antiquity, ranging from triumphal arches to bath houses, temples and palaces in Italy, France and Spain. Some of the buildings have been artificially reconstructed based on Medieval descriptions, while others are depicted in their ruinous states.

Horizontal Landscape with the remains of the Nymphaeum, mistakenly identified as the Temple of Minerva Medica in Rome, from the series 'Ruinarum variarum fabricarum delineationes pictoribus caeterisque id genus artificibus multum utiles', Lambert Suavius (Netherlandish, ca. 1510–by 1576), Etching

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