Minerva with a trophy. Engraving by A. Campanella after A. von Maron, 1781.

  • Maron, Anton von, 1733-1808.
Date:
1786
Reference:
662828i
Part of:
Wall paintings from the Villa Negroni (Montalto), Rome
  • Pictures

Selected images from this work

View 2 images

About this work

Description

On the left a young woman is holding the trophy armour in place

The Roman domestic mural painting of which this is a copy was situated in a room that which was dedicated to Minerva (Pallas Athene) (Buti room G)

Publication/Creation

[Rome] : [Camillo Buti], 1786.

Physical description

1 print : engraving ; platemark 55.6 x 48.3 cm

Lettering

Equiti Josepho Nicolao de Azara potentiss. Caroli III Hisp. reg. Catholici apud S. Sedem pro legato procuratorique generali aequo bonarum artium aestimatori et c. parietinas picturas inter Esquilias et Viminalem collem anno MDCCLXXVII detectas in ruderibus privatae domus Divi Antonini Pii aevo depictas facili elegantique arte et ornamentorum simplicitate spectandas servata proportione in tabulis expressas Camillus Buti architectus romanus D.D.D. MDCCLXXXVI Cum privilegio S.S.D.N. Pii VI. Eq. Ant. Maron del. Ang. Campanella sculp. Bears number: VIII

Notes

One of eight prints dedicated to José Nicolás de Azara, which were subsequently (in 1793, 1800, 1801 and 1802) supplemented by a further four prints dedicated to the Earl of Bristol, Bishop of Derry

References note

Hetty Joyce, 'The ancient frescoes from the Villa Negroni and their influence in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries', Art bulletin, September 1983, pp. 423-440, fig. 16
Andrew Wallace-Hadrill, 'Romanizing frescoes: from the Villa Negroni to Ickworth', in Roma britannica: art patronage and cultural exchange in eighteenth century Rome, Rome: British School at Rome, 2011, pp. 193-203 (on the excavation and fate of the frescoes)

Reference

Wellcome Collection 662828i

Reproduction note

After: a wall-painting which was discovered in Rome in 1777 in the grounds of the Villa Negroni (between S. Maria Maggiore and S. Maria degli Angeli, and later called Villa Montalto), was acquired by the Earl Bishop of Derry and subsequently perished

Type/Technique

Languages

Where to find it

  • Impression uncoloured

    LocationStatusAccess
    Closed stores
  • impression coloured in gouache

    LocationStatusAccess
    Closed stores

Permanent link