Enfilade

A Visual History of Rome: The Rodolfo Lanciani Digital Archive

Posted in resources by Editor on July 5, 2017

Francis Towne, The Colosseum from the Palatino, 1740; watercolor, 53.4 × 37.5 cm (Rome: Istituto Nazionale di Archeologia e Storia dell’Arte, Rodolfo Lanciani Collection, 16649 and Roma XI.1.I.15).

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Press release from Stanford, via Art Daily:

A team, which includes Stanford researchers, has created a new digital archive to study Rome’s transformation over the centuries. Images of Rome: The Rodolfo Lanciani Digital Archive, which went online in the spring, consists of almost 4,000 digitized drawings, prints, photographs, and sketches of Rome from the 16th to 20th centuries [with over 1,000 from the 18th century]. The pieces were collected by renowned Roman archaeologist Rodolfo Lanciani (1845–1929), who sought to document the entire history of Rome’s archeology up to the end of the 19th century.

“Rome is a layered city,” said Erik Steiner, co-director of the Spatial History Project at Stanford’s Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis (CESTA). “To be able to see that history you need to look through those layers, and this collection helps that process.”

The archive is a culmination of a two-year collaboration among CESTA, the Stanford University Libraries, University of Oregon, Dartmouth College, and the Italian government.

“This is part of our long-term ambition to bring one of the most documented cities in the world to the digital age,” Steiner said. “The project marries intense scholarly interest in Rome with best practices and tools built by the Stanford Libraries.”

Francesco Panini, Museo Vaticano, Museo Pio Clementino, 1775; watercolored pen and ink drawing, 72 × 51.2 cm (Rome: Istituto Nazionale di Archeologia e Storia dell’Arte, Rodolfo Lanciani Collection, Roma XI.61.II.69).

After Lanciani’s death in 1929, his library, which contains more than 21,000 items, was sold to the Istituto Nazionale di Archeologia e Storia dell’Arte (Italy’s National Institute of Archaeology and Art History) in Rome. Archaeologists, historians, architects, and other researchers who study ancient cities have used the collection to glean valuable information about Rome’s history and structure.

“These materials are very important and have been used by many different scholars, but access to them is quite limited,” said Roman archaeologist Giovanni Svevo, who also worked on the digital archive.

Viewing the archive requires a visit to the historic 15th-century Palazzo Venezia in central Rome. Lanciani’s collection is on the fourth floor and in its own dedicated room, which is open for only a few hours during weekdays. Only one folder from the collection can be viewed at a time. So the team—Steiner, Svevo, James Tice, a principal investigator on the project and an architecture professor at the University of Oregon, and Nicola Camerlenghi, an assistant professor of art history at Dartmouth College—set out to bring some of the collection onto the internet. Supported by a 2015 grant from the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, they partnered with Italy’s Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities and Tourism, and the National Institute to scan and create high-resolution images of each of the thousands of materials in the collection.

“Our collaboration with the Italian government on this project was very important,” Camerlenghi said. “It’s such a big help to scholars across the world when such teamwork can occur.”

Each digital object was categorized and tied to a descriptive set of data, so it could be properly stored and searched online. This part of the project demanded the most effort and care, the researchers said. The digital images and all associated descriptions are now permanently preserved in the Stanford Digital Repository.

“We believe this project is important for two reasons: it provides accessibility to a precious archival collection and, more broadly, it demonstrates a method whereby similar materials can be made available to scholars, students and the general public through the digital humanities,” Tice said.

Digitizing Lanciani’s collection is part of a larger effort to recreate the spatial history of Rome, a project named Mapping Rome, which Steiner and Tice began around 2004. As part of that effort, the team digitized the work of two 18th-century Italian architects, Giambattista Nolli and Giuseppe Vasi. They are also still working on completing the digitization of Lanciani’s famous Forma Urbis Romae, a cartographic map that traces Rome’s ancient ruins and its later developments. The map is 17 feet by 24 feet and is considered to have the most detailed information about Rome’s historical topography. The team envisions the end product to be an interactive map of Rome that links to the digitized archival materials.

“This is about telling a story of a place and reconstructing its past,” Steiner said. Beside allowing access to any scholar in the world, digitizing the archives also ensures their future preservation, Steiner emphasized. He said he hopes that more libraries and institutions around the world will devote time and funding to digitizing the humanities’ enormous body of historical documents.

“Nothing in the end would substitute holding primary documents in your hands, but you can answer a lot of scholarly questions by looking at them online in high resolution,” Camerlenghi said.

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New Book | Settecento romano: Reti del Classicismo arcadico

Posted in books by Editor on July 5, 2017

From Viella and available from ArtBooks.com:

Beatrice Alfonzetti, ed., Settecento romano: Reti del Classicismo arcadico (Rome: Viella, 2017), 532 pages, ISBN: 978 88672 88571, 50€ / $75.

Questo libro—nato da una ricerca d’équipe composta da letterati, storici dell’architettura, dell’arte e della musica—propone per la prima volta di unificare sotto la categoria di Classicismo arcadico tutto ciò che si crea ed elabora a Roma dalla fondazione dell’Arcadia in avanti. Non valida, ad esempio, per Torino, questa estensione permette di superare le viete periodizzazioni come la divisone per secoli fra Sei e Settecento o fra il primo e il secondo Settecento; e ci consente finalmente di intravedere la continuità, tutta romana, fra l’idea del bello di Bellori, la ragione poetica di Gravina, il recupero del tragico di Alfieri e Monti, tutti attivi, dall’inizio alla fine del secolo, proprio a Roma, accanto a Mengs, Füssli, Winckelmann, David. Al centro l’Arcadia che, con le acclamazioni o iscrizioni di cardinali, principi, sovrani, letterati, artisti di passaggio o residenti a Roma, era riuscita nell’impresa di fondare una repubblica letteraria sovranazionale che guardava persino a Voltaire. Era all’avanguardia, allora, Roma nelle arti, nelle accademie, nelle biblioteche, nei teatri e nella letteratura sinora chiamata neoclassica.

C O N T E N T S

Beatrice Alfonzetti, Introduzione

Parte prima

I. Il Classicismo restaurato
• Amedeo Quondam, Roma 1672: il Classicismo restaurato. L’idea del bello e il canone delle arti secondo Bellori

Parte seconda

I. L’Arcadia e la Roma di Clemente XI
• Valentina Gallo, La Basilissa: Cristina di Svezia in Arcadia
• Javier Gutiérrez Carou, Endimione fra Alessandro Guidi e Francesco de Lemene: drammaturgia, spettacolo, struttura dei finali
• Marina Formica, Dominare il tempo. Clemente XI e i tentativi di riforma del calendario
• Simone Caputo, Il ‘teatro della festa’ nella Roma di Clemente XI

II. Il Classicismo arcadico
• Franco Piperno, Architettura e musica nella Roma del Classicismo arcadico
• Angela Cipriani, Un secolo di premiazioni in Campidoglio (1696–1795). Le quattro arti liberali in mutuo soccorso
• Nicola Badolato, Il Ciro di Pietro Ottoboni e Alessandro Scarlatti e gli allestimenti operistici romani di Filippo Juvarra
• Massimo Zammerini, Architettura e scenografia nella Roma del Settecento
• Ilaria Delsere, L’Arcadia alla corte pontificia: la collaborazione tra Ludovico Sergardi e Antonio Valeri alla Fabbrica di San Pietro (1713–1726)
•  Valter Curzi, Memoria dell’antico nella pittura di storia a Roma tra Seicento e Settecento: un contributo per la revisione storico-critica del Neoclassicismo
• Silvia Tatti, L’Arcadia di Crescimbeni e il trionfo della poesia: l’incoronazione in Campidoglio del 1725
• Alviera Bussotti, La recita del Temistocle di Michele Giuseppe Morei: tra Zeno e Metastasio
• Roberto Gigliucci, Il cardinale Pietro Ottoboni tra San Filippo Neri e San Casimiro

III. L’Arcadia: una rete transnazionale
• Maurizio Campanelli, I Sermones di Giovan Battista Casti (1762–1764)
• Elodie Oriol, Mecenatismo e sviluppo delle carriere musicali: il ruolo delle famiglie Acquaviva, Stuart e Albani nella Roma settecentesca
• Piermario Vescovo, Goldoni: vacanze romane
• Rosanna Cioffi, Tra Arcadia e Neoclassicismo. Da Maratti a Mengs nel segno di Shaftesbury e Winckelmann
• Marina Caffiero, Dal monastero al salotto alla tribuna. La mediazione culturale femminile nella Roma di metà Settecento
• Beatrice Alfonzetti, Poeti italiani e stranieri nelle adunanze arcadiche
• Andrea Fabiano, Astacide Tespio ovvero Poinsinet le Noyé (le Mystifié): un librettista comico francese in Arcadia
• Franca Sinopoli, Giovanni Battista Audiffredi e la realizzazione del modello di biblioteca universale
• Antonio Rostagno, Il ‘nuovo Dante’ nella musica. Dante e Petrarca in due manoscritti romani di Nicolò Antonio Zingarelli
• Orietta Rossi Pinelli, Gli artisti stranieri a Roma nel XVIII secolo

Indice dei nomi

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