
Cleveland Museum of Art
Eighteen Views of Rome: The Campidoglio
Lievin Cruyl
- Date
- 1665
- Medium
- pen and brown ink and brush and gray wash over graphite; framing lines in brown ink
- Culture
- Flanders
- Department
- Drawings
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Flemish artist Lieven Cruyl made a number of drawings of emblematic vistas of Rome for the Roman publisher Giovanni Battista de Rossi, of which ten were published as etchings in 1666. The Campidoglio features architecture designed by Michelangelo. The Campidoglio was an important ritual space atop the Capitoline Hill overlooking the Roman Forum. Michelangelo reoriented the piazza to look away from the forum and toward Saint Peter’s Basilica, creating a link between the civic buildings on the piazza and the home of the Catholic Church. He had the piazza paved in a trapezoidal shape and placed the ancient Equestrian Statue of Marcus Aurelius on a newly designed plinth in the middle. With this design, he transformed the Campidoglio from a muddy hill to a central destination and ritual space for centuries to come.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

Eighteen Views of Rome: The Piazza Farnese (recto); Cartouche (verso)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Eighteen Views of Rome: The Piazza Farnese (recto)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Equestrian Statue of Marcus Aurelius
Cleveland Museum of Art

Cartouche (verso)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Eighteen Views of Rome: The Piazza del Popolo (recto)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Eighteen Views of Rome: The Piazza del Popolo (recto); Sketch for San Giovanni in Laterano (verso)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Eighteen Views of Rome: The Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore
Cleveland Museum of Art

Eighteen Views of Rome: The Piazza Colonna
Cleveland Museum of Art

Eighteen Views of Rome: The Castel Sant'Angelo
Cleveland Museum of Art

Eighteen Views of Rome: The Campo Vaccino (The Roman Forum)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Eighteen Views of Rome: The Piazza Barberini (recto)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Eighteen Views of Rome: The Church of Sant'Ignazio
Cleveland Museum of Art