Detail View: Archivision Base to Module 9: Palazzo Borghese

Preferred Title: 
Palazzo Borghese
Image View: 
View of the west end
Creator: 
attributed to Jacopo da Vignola (Italian architect, 1507-1573); Flaminio Ponzio (Italian architect, ca.1560-1613); Martino Longhi the Elder (Italian architect, ca. 1534-ca. 1591)
Location: 
site: Rome, Lazio, Italy
Date: 
1560-1680 (creation)
Cultural Context: 
Italian
Style Period: 
Baroque
Work Type 1: 
palazzo
Classification: 
architecture
Material: 
brick
Technique: 
construction (assembling)
Subjects: 
architectural exteriors; rulers and leaders
Description: 
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. (Source: Wikipedia; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page)
Collection: 
Archivision Base Collection
Identifier: 
1A2-I-R-PBO-A5
Rights: 
© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.