The Doric Nymphaeum at the Villa Domitian

Minneapolis Institute of Art

The Doric Nymphaeum at the Villa Domitian

Carlo Labruzzi

Date
c. 1789
Medium
Pen and watercolor over black chalk
Department
European Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Carlo Labruzzi represents the Doric Nymphaeum at the Villa of Domitian, 20 kilometers south of Rome, near Lake Albano. The ancient structure used to incorporate various fountains and waterworks and became a popular destination of the Grand Tour after it was rediscovered in the 1720s. (We are grateful to Bent Sorensen for identifying the site and related drawing by Labruzzi in the Vatican Library.) In the fall of 1789, Labruzzi sketched it and many other buildings during his travels on the Appian way (from Rome to Benevento) with the English antiquarian Sir Richard Colt Hoare of Stourhead (England). The 226 highly finished monochrome drawings of the sites on this trip are in an album now in the Vatican Library. The Minneapolis watercolor relates closely to one of the Vatican album drawings, so was likely executed some time after the 1789 trip. Hoare's famous gardens at Stourhead include some classicizing buildings that may have been inspired by his travels with Labruzzi. Italy, Europe

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