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Palazzo Borghese: Flaminio Ponzo's short façade of Palazzo Borghese on the Tiber River

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posted on 2017-07-03, 00:00 authored by G. Massiot & cie
It was nicknamed il Cembalo (“the harpsichord”) due to its unusual trazezoidal groundplan; its shortest front faces the River Tiber.
Palazzo Borghese is the main seat of the Borghese family in Rome; it was nicknamed il Cembalo (“the harpsichord”) due to its unusual trazezoidal groundplan. Its entrance facade faces the Fontanella di Borghese, with a great flanking facade in Piazza Borghese and a slightly angled extension down via Borghese to the river. Howard Hibbard demonstrated that the nine-bay section of palazzo was begun in 1560-1561 for Monsignor Tomasso del Giglio, whose arms remain over the door in Piazza Borghese, and he suggests that the architect was Vignola, an attribution accepted by Anthony Blunt and considered conclusive by James S. Ackerman followed by other scholars since, with more or less reduced interventions by Longhi.

History

Date Created

1910-01-01

Date Modified

2017-07-03

Spatial Coverage

Rome, Lazio, Italy: Piazza Borghese Rome +41.903889+12.476389

Temporal Coverage

before or circa 1910

Cultural Context

Baroque

Rights Statement

To view the physical lantern slide, please contact the Architecture Library.

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