The birthday of a Palazzo: on 18 December 1625, Maffeo
Barberini, or Pope Urban VIII, purchased some land on the Quirinale Hill of
Rome. Over the following years—and especially between 1628 and 1638—the
suburban site would become one of the most famous and original buildings of
early modern Italy. The palace has a unique plan shaped like an H. Between the
legs of the H a portico looks towards the Vatican and St
Peter’s, where Urban VIII lived as a Pope and where he changed the fortunes of
his family forever.
Thanks to its H-shaped structure, the palace has two side
wings which were initially intended as residence for two of the Pope’s nephews,
Taddeo and Francesco Barberini, These private apartments are reached through
grand staircases from the palace’s salone,
the main hall which opens right behind the portico.
The palace’s original design was the result of many
changes of plan. The project’s architects—initially Carlo Maderno and then
Gianlorenzo Bernini—were influenced by discussions with their attentive patrons
as well as by the most recent architectural developments. They were helped by
assistants who would become leading architects in their own right, for example
Francesco Borromini, who realised several architectural drawings for the
project.
Very few years after its completion, the palace was
substantially remodelled to create new vistas
and access routes through the grounds and to make space for the Barberinis’
large collection of painting and sculpture. An impressive series of ceiling
paintings added to the splendour of the display, comprising works by
contemporary artists but also of sixteenth-century pieces transferred from the
previous residence of the Barberini family. The decoration is notable for its
stylistic variety, possibly a result of the speed at which the interiors were
finished before the arrival of the palace’s inhabitants. Many well-known Roman artists took part in the project, for example Andrea Sacchi, Giovanni Francesco Romanelli,
Paolo Baldini, Giacinto Gimigani and Andrea Camassei. The most important was
surely Pietro da Cortona, the overseer of the project responsible for the
famous fresco in the Palace’s salone,Triumph of Divine Providence and the Accomplishment of its Ends through the
Pontificate of Urban VIII Barberini, a tour-de-force of baroque illusionism.
Pietro da Cortona, Ceiling vault in the Salone, 1633-39,
fresco. Rome, Palazzo Barberini. Source: Web
Gallery of Art.
Pietro da Cortona, Design for the ceiling of the salone of Palazzo Barberini, 1633-39, pen with brown wash, 427 x 562
mm. Vienna, Graphische Sammlung Albertina. Source: Web Gallery of Art.
Palazzo Barberini, interior, staircase by Francesco
Borromini. Source: Wikimedia
Commons.
i was watching a video of cyntoia brown talking to a man investigating her case or whatever, and she’s telling him about how Cutthroat, her pimp, forced her to do drugs, raped her several times, choked her until she passed out and then he asks her ‘how come you didnt leave?’ and she’s like ‘didnt you hear what i just fucking told you? he even knows where my mom lives.’
i just hate the constant victim blaming women go through. no one ever asks why that men was raping her and forcing her to sell her body. no one ever asks why a forty-something man purchased it. it’s always our fault for “staying”.
anyway, i hope she finds peace someday.
she was a little girl
A LITTLE GIRL, YOU MONSTER!
She was 16 years old with an adult sexually abusing her and they ask her “why didn’t you just leave”. This is how women are treated when they report rape, even if they were a child victim of sex trafficking who killed one of the men who paid to rape her and tried to escape.
Poor girl, she looks so tired…
They are treating her like she did something wrong.
She is the victim and should be supported and celebrated for surviving her brutal capture.
The male interviewer is asking a child rape victim if she “had sex with” the sadistic child rapist sex trafficker.
She didn’t “have sex” with him she was repeatedly and brutally raped.
This should be grounds for a mistrial and the male interviewer should be punished for his treatment of child rape victims.
love women who dont subscribe to modesty like at all… when someone tells them they’re good at something and they like “yeah i am” “i know” that’s so hot