Veni, Vidi, Vici

How Giovanni Battista Piranesi’s mournful portrait of Rome shaped the Enlightenment’s understanding of progress.

For the novelist Marguerite Yourcenar, Giovanni Battista Piranesi was “the inventor of Rome’s tragic beauty.” The son of a Venetian stonemason, Piranesi arrived in Rome around 1740 and soon became infatuated with the Eternal City’s antiquities. His etchings of Roman ruins, which he began producing as a 20-year-old architectural draftsman, went on to capture all […]

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