Fountain in the Piazza Farnese
We look here at a pair of fountains that the Farnese family installed in front of their palace in Rome in 1612. Huge granite tubs were brought from the Baths of Caracalla, placed within low surrounding basins, and vases added crowned with the family emblem of the fleur de lys. This is a proof of one of 43 wood engravings that Ruzicka made to illustrate "Fountains of Papal Rome," 1915, where this image appears on page 63. The artist also made a larger companion image focused on one both fountain (MMA, proof, 18.25.14).
Ruzicka went to Rome in 1913 with the manuscript of Mrs. Charles MacVeagh's "Fountains of Papal Rome" in hand as a guide. When published by Charles Scribner's Sons, New York in 1915 the book contained fourteen full-page images and twenty-nine page headings and vignettes. The artist later described the book as a "quite remarkable work...still the most authoritative book there is on the subject in the English language."
Ruzicka went to Rome in 1913 with the manuscript of Mrs. Charles MacVeagh's "Fountains of Papal Rome" in hand as a guide. When published by Charles Scribner's Sons, New York in 1915 the book contained fourteen full-page images and twenty-nine page headings and vignettes. The artist later described the book as a "quite remarkable work...still the most authoritative book there is on the subject in the English language."
Artwork Details
- Title: Fountain in the Piazza Farnese
- Series/Portfolio: Fountains of Papal Rome
- Artist: Rudolph Ruzicka (American (born Czechoslovakia), Kourim, Bohemia 1883–1978 Hanover, New Hampshire)
- Author: Related author Fanny Davenport Rogers MacVeagh (American, 1860–1948)
- Date: 1914
- Medium: Wood engraving, proof
- Dimensions: Image: 2 11/16 × 3 7/16 in. (6.9 × 8.8 cm)
Sheet: 9 1/16 × 6 5/8 in. (23 × 16.8 cm) - Classification: Prints
- Credit Line: Gift of Rudolph Ruzicka, 1918
- Object Number: 18.25.40
- Curatorial Department: Drawings and Prints
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