Vista da Praça de São Pedro, Cidade do Vaticano, Vaticano (Rome, A View of Saint Peter's Square) - Giovanni Paolo Panini
Cidade do Vaticano - Vaticano
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OST - 60x126
Panini was the pre-eminent painter of vedute in Rome from the
second quarter of the 18th century until his death in 1765. Though born in
Piacenza, where he is thought to have trained with the architectural painter
Bibiena, Panini moved to Rome in 1711 and remained there for the rest of his
life. He joined the Congregazione
dei Virtuosi al Pantheon in 1718, aged seventeen, and shortly
afterwards became a member of the Accademia
di San Luca, of which he was elected principe in 1754. During the first two decades of the 18th
century Panini worked almost exclusively for the Roman nobility; the Patrizi
amongst them, for whom he decorated a villa outside Porta Pia; and the Spinola,
for whom he decorated an apartment in the Quirinale. Panini’s main output,
however, consisted primarily of easel paintings in which he accurately depicted
the various splendors of ancient and modern Rome.
His acceptance into the Académie de France à Rome in 1732 not only
attests to the extent of his influence already at that date, but more
importantly it marks the beginning of a period in which he was to receive
commissions from an increasingly international clientele. From the 1730s royal
and aristocratic patrons from France, Spain and England commissioned and
acquired works by Panini; amongst them Philip V of Spain, who commissioned a
painting from the artist in 1735, and three years later Panini executed a set
of five paintings for Marble Hill House in Richmond. Many of his international
commissions were not merely topographical reminders of places visited by the
tourists on the Grand Tour, but they often assumed historical significance,
commemorating important events or visits to Rome on behalf of dignitaries and
royal figures. By the mid-18th century Panini was at the head of an extensive
workshop which he had set up to meet the ever-increasing demand for his paintings.
As an epistolary exchange from 1752 records, Panini only worked on commission
by this date and a letter concerning the King of Sardinia’s wish to acquire
paintings by the artist records that he barely had the time to meet the demand
for commissions he received both from Rome and abroad: 'ha appena il tempo di
soddisfare alle commissioni che gli vengono date e dai paesi e qui in Roma da
molti e dal Signor Cardinal Segretano di Stato specialmente, che lo
protegge' (cited by Arisi, see Literature,
1986, p. 215).
Panini’s success was largely due to the fact that he differed from other
contemporary painters in his picturesque approach to painting these familiar
sites. Though topographically accurate, Panini’s views tend to appear more
theatrical than the more precise views of other vedutisti such as Bellotto or Vanvitelli, and the
importance that he places on the numerous figures that populate his scenes and
the unusual viewpoints he adopts serve to underline this more dramatic approach
to view painting. Panini’s vedute had
a lasting influence on painters of the second half of the 18th and early 19th
century. Hubert Robert, who arrived in Rome in 1754 (the same year in which
these paintings were executed), went on to propagate Panini’s style not only in
Rome but in his native France.
St. Peter's Square was the square most often painted by vedutisti in Rome.
Its impressive scale (it measures a colossal 240 metres in width), the
grandeur of its architecture and its position within the Vatican combined to
make it the most famous square in Europe. The obelisk, which can still be
seen in situ in the
centre of the square, was brought to Rome by Caligula in 37 A.D. and was moved
by Pope Sixtus V to its current location in the summer of 1586. The two
fountains were erected in the 17th century, in 1613 and 1677 respectively.
Designs were provided for the Basilica by some of the greatest architects of
the Renaissance: Leon Battista Alberti, Bernardo Rossellino, Bramante, Raphael,
Giuliano da Sangallo, Baldassarre Peruzzi, Antonio da Sangallo the Younger and,
most famously, Michelangelo. Further modifications were made in the 17th
century by Carlo Maderno and Gian Lorenzo Bernini. The square, as it appears in
Panini’s painting, had been remodelled following Gian Lorenzo Bernini’s designs
in 1656-7 into a perfectly symmetrical space, framed by an elegant double
colonnade, itself surmounted by statues based on Bernini’s designs.

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