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Tag: Rome

Italy – Part 2 – The Vatican Museum, Sistine Chapel, St. Peter’s Basilica, and Local Sites

 

This fall I took a great trip to Rome, Florence, and Venice. This is Part 2 covering more sites in Rome. Future posts include Florence and Venice.

One of the highlights of my time in Rome was the visit to the Vatican Museum and the Sistine Chapel. Our group had a private tour after hours and it was amazing! There were just 24 of us, including our terrific guide. The museum was deserted except for a handful of security guards, and eerily quiet. We took a leisurely tour of the museum as our guide discussed the history and pointed out interesting aspects of the artworks. Here are some scenes.

 

Fresco at the Vatican Museum

 

Ceiling at the Vatican Museum Gallery of Maps

 

Vatican Museum

 

Gallery of Maps Vatican Museum – Paintings of topographical maps based on drawings by Ignazio Danti

The highlight of the tour was the 45 minutes we spent in the Sistine Chapel. It was dark outside and we had the Chapel to ourselves. The guard unexpectedly allowed us to take pictures without flash. I just had my iphone, but was able to get some reasonably good shots despite the low lighting. Michelangelo worked on the ceiling from 1508-12.

Creation of Adam – Sistine Chapel

 

Downfall of Adam and Eve and Expulsion from the Garden – Sistine Chapel

 

The Prophet Isaiah – Sistine Chapel

This is the view from the Pope’s entrance. The paintings on the ceiling get progressively larger as they move further from the entrance. Some say the effect was deliberate so that all the pictures would look the same size to the Pope, but others say that Michelangelo was being pressured to finish and the last pictures were larger and with less detail in response to this demand. Your guess is as good as mine, but I’m inclined to go with the second explanation after looking at the incredible detail in the early pictures, and the obvious lack of detail in some of the later ones.

Sistine Chapel Ceiling from Pope’s Entrance

Painted on the altar end of the chapel is Michelangelo’s fresco called The Last Judgment (1534-1541).

The Last Judgment – Sistine Chapel

 

Detail – The Last Judgment – Sistine Chapel

The next day I visited St. Peter’s Basilica with some friends from the group. Right inside St. Peter’s is Michelangelo’s Pietà (1498-99). It’s hard to get a good picture because of the protective glass. It’s a beautiful sculpture. Although quite crowded, we were able to see many parts of the basilica.  Despite the basilica’s grandeur, I found it to be wonderfully serene.

Pieta – Michelangelo – St. Peter’s

 

St. Peter’s Basilica

 

Altar – St. Peter’s

 

Altar of Transfiguration – Raphael (1520) – St. Peter’s

 

St. Peter’s Basilica

 

St. Peter’s Basilica

On the walk back from St. Peter’s to our hotel, we stopped at the Local Outdoor Market.  The market contained a bounty of fresh produce and fruits, meats, cheeses, liquors, spices, clothing, crafts, flowers, and much more.

Local Market – Rome

 

Local Market – Rome

 

Off to Florence and Venice!

Rome Part 1 – Colosseum, Forum, Capitoline Museum, Borghese Gallery

Roman Forum

This fall, for my first trip to Italy, I took a Road Scholar tour to Rome, Florence, and Venice. I typically travel on my own, but I wanted to focus on the art and the architecture, and I knew I didn’t have enough background to do it justice. To have experts leading the tours and giving us the background on what we were seeing was amazing.

In Rome, we stayed at the Hotel Tiziano. What a great location! No more than a 30-minute walk to most of the places we wanted to see, but right on the bus line and a block from the taxi stand if you wanted to ride. There were also plenty of great restaurants in the area, as well as small grocery stores and other shops. The hotel has an old world feel, but with everything we needed.

Our first stop was the Colosseum and the Forum. As we approached the Colosseum, I was overwhelmed by the sense of history that was everywhere we went in Rome, and especially this site which was an important part of Roman life. Walking around the site, with the help of our terrific tour guide, I could imagine the activities (many horribly gruesome) that were held there. But I also marveled at the advancement of the construction from the series of elevators that carried animals from the underground areas to the main arena, to running water toilets, and the areas for food and other concessions.

Colosseum

Interior of the Colosseum. See the remains of the elevator shafts in the center.

Between the Colosseum and the Forum is the Arch of Constantine, one of three surviving arches on the site commemorating significant military victories. The carvings on these arches is amazing especially considering the Arch was erected in 315 CE.

Arch of Constantine

The Forum was much larger than I thought it would be. There are ruins of many building and meeting areas. I can see that it was the epicenter of Roman lives at the time with areas for a marketplace, government offices, political events, and many other aspects of Roman history.

Roman Forum from the Capitoline Museum

Roman Forum from the Capitoline Museum

Adjacent to the Roman Forum is the Capitoline Museum. The collection dates back to 1471 and the focus of the exhibits are sculptures and other art closely linked to the city of Rome.  The first picture is the Statue of the Capitoline Gaul which depicts a wounded Gaul in the last moments before succumbing to his wounds. This is a very moving piece that is so different from the typical victorious and triumphant soldier. The Great Hall (second picture) contains a number of works of Greek sculptures. The ancient Romans had a great fascination with Greek art and many Roman artists incorporated Greek styles into their own works. Finally, the third picture shows busts of the ancient Roman and Greek philosophers.

The Capitoline Gaul – Capitoline Museum

Great Hall – Capitoline Museum

Hall of the Philosophers – Capitoline Museum

The Borghese Gallery, adjacent to the Villa Borghese and its beautiful grounds that are now a park, is a must see.  It is the gallery of Cardinal Scipione Borghese (nephew of Pope Paul V)  that was collected in the fifteen and sixteen hundreds.  It highlights works from Caravaggio and Bernini, with works from other renowned artists to include Tiziano, Raphael, Rubens, Botticelli, and Canovas.  Some of my favorites were David, Apollo and Daphne, Rape of Proserpina, and Aeneas, Anchises and Ascanius, all by Bernini.

David – by Bernini -1623-24

Apollo and Daphne – by Bernini – 1622-25

Rape of Proserpina – by Bernini – 1621-22

Aeneas, Anchises, and Ascanius – by Bernini – 1619

 

See Rome – Part 2 for the Vatican Museum, Sistine Chapel, St. Peters Basilica, and Local Sites.

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