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Home

Symposium: Piranesi, Rome, and the Arts of Design

Mar
30
2013
Saturday, 9:00 a.m.
James S. Copley Auditorium

Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Carceri d'invenzione (prison), ca. 1761. Etching.

Schedule of Events

9:00 - 9:30 a.m.                  Coffee and Pastries
9:30 - 9:45 a.m.                  Welcome by Roxana Velazquez
9:45 - 10:00 a.m.                Introduction by Dr. John Marciari
10:00 - 10:30 a.m.              Jeffrey L. Collins, Ph.D.
10:30 - 10:45 a.m.              Break
10:45 - 11:15 a.m.              John Pinto, Ph.D.
11:15 - 11:45 a.m.              Christopher M.S. Johns, Ph.D.
11:45 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.     Plenary session
 
Traffic and Parking Update
 

Presentation Descriptions

Jeffrey L. Collins, Ph.D., Professor and Chair of Academic Programs, Bard Graduate Center
 
More is More: Piranesi and Design
Giambattista Piranesi is best known today as a printmaker. Yet in his lifetime, he routinely signed his plates—and clearly wished to be known—as an architect, a profession that in the eighteenth-century often embraced interior decoration and furnishing. As an architect-designer, Piranesi “invented” not just buildings but chairs, tables, clocks, coaches, vases, candelabra, tablewares, chimneypieces, wall ornaments, and even complete rooms. Many feature in this exhibition, some on paper (where they largely remained) and some brought to life for the first time in three dimensions. In their eclecticism, visual density, and even whimsy, these exuberant modern designs may challenge our idea of Piranesi as a neoclassicist devoted solely to an image of ancient grandeur. But what were the sources and inspirations for Piranesi’s ideas, and how do they relate to prevailing eighteenth-century tastes? This lecture places Piranesi’s design work in its cultural and conceptual context, asking how this seemingly marginal activity exemplified the artist’s broader concerns and constituted, albeit secondhand, a central part of his legacy.
 
John Pinto, Ph.D., Howard Crosby Butler Memorial Professor of Art and Archeology, Princeton University

Piranesi's "Speaking Ruins:" Fragment and Fantasy
Shortly after his first visit to Rome, Giovanni Battista Piranesi memorably wrote, “Speaking ruins have filled my spirit with images that accurate drawings could never have succeeded in conveying.” Piranesi’s appreciation of the expressive nature of ruins is telling. So, too, is the distinction he makes between experiencing ancient architecture directly, through on-site examination, on the one hand, and studying it at several removes by means of measured drawings, on the other. Piranesi provides a poetic distillation of over three centuries of reappraisals of the value and meaning of ruins for humanists, antiquarians, and architects. Professor Pinto’s lecture will use Piranesi’s graphic work to explore his virtuoso variations on the theme of the fragment, his analytic strategies, and his visionary engagement with the past. It was Piranesi’s genius to bridge the gap between past and present, between source and invention, thereby breathing new life into the classical legacy.

Christopher M.S. Johns, Ph.D., Norman L. and Roselea J. Golberg, Professor and Chair of the Department of History of Art, Vanderbilt University

Piranesi and the Fabrication of Rome in the European Imagination: Le Vedute di Roma and Antichità Romane
The vast majority of Europeans who studied, collected and admired the graphic works of Giambattista Piranesi never saw Rome. This fabricated Rome inspired the European imaginary in a way that is difficult to understand in the modern age of imagery overload and instantaneous access to almost everything. But Piranesi’s Rome was a reality in it own right, and only those relative few who actually visited the Eternal City during their Grand Tours could compare the artist’s vision with diurnal reality. Indeed, not a few Roman visitors, conditioned by their study of Piranesi’s imagery, were disappointed in the modest scale and shabby surroundings of some of the greatest monuments to survive from an admired antiquity. The Views of Rome and Roman Antiquities, two of the artist’s most influential series of etchings, had an exceptionally high profile in Enlightenment Europe and form the basis for his vision of Roman magnificence. This lecture will explore the connection between word and image and between image in reality in Piranesi’s influential series with the intention of shedding some light on the disconnection between the scholar’s and the tourist’s Rome in the middle decades of the eighteenth-century.

 

Please Note: The morning of the event the Cabrillo Bridge, Balboa Dr., Marston Loop, El Prado, and Pan American Road West & East will be closed until around 10:00 a.m.. The Village Place and Space Theater Way park entrances off of Park Boulevard will remain open. Parking is also available at Inspiration Point. Please plan additional time for transportation and parking. Visit BalboaPark.org for up-to-date information on road closures and traffic information.

$10 members, students, military, and seniors/$15 nonmembers
Tickets

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Exhibitions on View

  • Young Art 2013: The Story of Me
  • Piranesi, Rome, and the Arts of Design
  • Pacific Horizons
  • Alternative Accounts

Related Exhibition

Piranesi, Rome, and the Arts of Design

Giambattista Piranesi (1720-1778) was a printmaker, architect, antiquarian, art dealer, theorist, and...

MORE INFORMATION

Location

The San Diego Museum of Art
1450 El Prado
Balboa Park, San Diego, CA
(619) 232-7931

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PO Box 122107
San Diego, CA 92112-2107

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Sunday 12:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri., Sat.
10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Wednesday Closed


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June 6 through August 29

Sunday 12:00 - 5:00 p.m.
Mon., Tues., Fri., Sat.
10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Wednesday Closed
Thursday 10:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.*

*See calendar for exceptions

Flickr Photos

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Member Spotlight

Catherine Gallagher, Household Member
Joanne Watson, Friend Member

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RT @sdma: Create a narrative quilt inspired by Young Art 2013 during an adult workshop, this Saturday afternoon. http://t.co/7zyycexVOx...
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