Fountain with Silenus in the Garden of the Cesi Palace near Rome

Art Institute of Chicago

Fountain with Silenus in the Garden of the Cesi Palace near Rome

Pieter Perret (Flemish, 1555–1639)

Date
1581
Medium
Engraving in black on ivory laid paper
Culture
Flanders
Department
Prints and Drawings
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

A pupil of Cornelis Cort, Pieter Perret traveled to Rome in the 1580s, where he engraved this view of the garden of the Cesi Palace. The curious fountain depicted here has as a base the celebrated neo-Attic Torlonia Vase, which is still preserved in Rome. An ancient statue of Silenus, one of the god Bacchus’s inebriated followers, was added to the vase after 1550; thus Perret’s print documents a case of a hybrid artwork made from ancient sculpture and adapted to suit Renaissance tastes. Silenus holds a wineskin, gruesomely interpreted by Perret as a decapitated torso of a woman, through which water is poured into the basin below.

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Object type
AAT300041273

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