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Interior of the Baths of Karacalli in Rome

Part of the collection: Painting and drawing

Popularization note

Interior of the Baths of Caracalla in Rome A painting from the collection of the Lubomirski family, former owners of the caste, behind glass, in white passe-partout, presenting the interior of the Baths of Caracalla in Rome. The light is falling from the left side of the painting, its source is the sun, not shown in the painting. A view from the vaulted interior of the tepidarium through the entrance arcade to the frigidarium ruins. The ruins are overgrown with vine in bright green colours, muted with grey and in places where the sun rays are falling ˗ golden. The composition is closed; it is only through the frigidarium arcades (in the back in the centre of the painting) where it opens to the distant, hazy and hilly landscape with buildings. Inside, there are groups of people collecting hay and hunting snakes. At the bottom, there is a caption on the passe-partout: “Vue de l intérieur des Thermes de Caracalla a Rome” and “Volpato et du Cros.” The Baths of Caracalla are the best preserved Roman baths, they are located to the south-west of Via Appia. Their construction started around 206 during the reign of Septimus Severus and they were commissioned in 216-217 during the reign of Caracalla, thence their name. The entire complex occupied approx. 12 hectares; there were cloakrooms, a palaestra (for gymnastic exercises), rooms for massage and leisure, a library, as well as saunas and a swimming pool with hot water. The interior of the building was decorated with numerous niches and recesses. The walls and the floors were covered with paintings and mosaics. The tepidarium is a leisure room with a heated floor ˗ the heat radiated from the walls and the floor. The frigidarium is a pool with cold water; one cooled there after bathing in the pool with hot water. Giovanni Volpato, one of the authors of the picture, was an engraver (born in Bassano del Grappa, died in Rome). In 1792, together with Louis Ducros, he published a series of prints of the interior of the new Museo Pio Clementino. Abraham Louise Rodolphe Ducros (born in 1748 in Yverdorn in Switzerland, deceased in 1810) was a self-taught painter. He painted primarily watercolours. In 1776, he left for Rome and spent 30 years there. When in Italy, he saw the graphic prints of Piranesi and the works of this artist greatly affected him. The artwork is framed in frames identical to the pictures presenting pavilions and gazebos in the Chinese style and displayed in the Pompeii room of the Chinese Apartment on the first floor of the castle.

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

Volpato Giovanni (1735-1803) i Ducros Louis (1748-1810)

Dimensions

height: 86.5 cm, width: 64 cm

Object type

Painting and drawing

Technique

aquarel

Material

wood, paper

Origin / acquisition method

decyzja administracyjna

Creation time / dating

18th-19th century

Creation / finding place

powstanie: unknown

Owner

Castle Museum in Łańcut

Identification number

S.2306MŁ

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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