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The Baroque in the Vatican Art and Culture in Papal Rome II 25 November 2005 to 19 March 2006 An exhibition organized by the Art and Exhibition Hall of the Federal Republic of Germany in cooperation with the Musei Vaticani, the Fabrica di San Pietro and the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana ![]() At the heart of the exhibition is the approx. 5 meters-high Wood Model of St. Peter’s Dome designed by Michelangelo and Giacomo della Porta. Michelangelo’s design of the dome not only became the emblem of Baroque Rome, but the cathedral with its dome and square, completed after one hundred years of building history, symbolizes like no other artwork the Counter-Reformation Church’s own claim to world influence: A claim that, faced by declining political importance, particularly became manifest the intellectual and artistic leadership maintained by Papal Rome, which radiated out across Europe. The history of St. Peter’s construction and of its interior, organized in specific sections, follows along this line accordingly. The most renowned artists of the time were involved in its history, such as Michelangelo Bernini, Borromini, Sacchi, Guercino and Reni. ![]() Carlo Maratta Madonna mit segnendem Christusknaben, 1693-1695 © Monumenti, Musei e Gallerie Pontificie ![]() Giovanni Lanfranco Madonna mit Kind und dem hl. Laurentius © Palazzo del Quirinale, Roma Baroque art, in the interaction between architecture, painting and sculpture, represents a balanced interplay of light, material and color. The exhibition seeks to reflect this by including the various media, such as paintings, sculptures, tapestries, paraments, books, etchings and drawings. It will also address the major fields of Papal patronage, as well as the patron activities of the cardinals and religious orders by the example of the most important (and most beautiful) works. These include, for instance, the construction and furnishing of family palaces and villas, the building of a family chapel and, most important, the construction and furnishing of the major Churches commissioned by the religious orders. Due not least to the global relationships of its missionary orders, Rome and the Vatican were not only known for art but also as a center of science. The Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana and the circle around Cardinal Caesar Baronius had a decisive impact on the establishment of the apologist ecclesiastical history and on the development of Christian archaeology. The Roman Accademia dei Lincei played a leading role in the establishment of our modern world view and became the model for all other modern academies of sciences. Named after the sharp-sighted lynx (ital. lince), the Accademia had no lesser goal than the study of the theatrum totius naturae, the creation of images of all the natural appearances. The ‘Lynx-eyes’ provided us with the first image created with the help of a microscope: typically, of bees, Pope Urban VIIIth’s heraldic animals. ![]() Ercole Ferrata Terracotta-Modellino für Engel mit Kreuz, 1668 © Staatliche Eremitage, Sankt Petersburg Press officer |
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