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The Best Little Museum in Rome
Rome's Galleria Borghese is packed with amazing works by Bernini, Caravaggio, and Raphael, and ranks as one of my top three small museums in the world
Fully reopened a decade ago after a 14-year restoration, the Galleria Borghese is my favorite small museum in the world (well, it's a close tie between this, the Rodin Museum in Paris, and the Frick in New York).
I suppose
you could spend just 45 to 90 minutes walking around this frescoed 1613 villa admiring classical statues and mosaics, Renaissance paintings, and some of the finest marble sculptures of the baroque era. I'd bring a sketchbook and spend half the day.
Book ahead!
The Galleria Borghese's new ticket reservation policy is annoying, but in summer the museum can be sold out for days, so try to book at least a day beforehand (earlier if possible) to ensure you get the entry time you want: tel. +39-06-32-810, www.ticketeria.it
Most of the collection was once a private one, acquired by the villa's original owner, Cardinal Scipione Borghese, whose taste in art ranks up there with the early Medici (he was patron to a young Bernini, and bought Caravaggio’s works when no one else wanted them).
Neoclassical master Canova's sculpted portrait of Napoleon's sister Pauline Bonaparte as Venus (1805) reclining on a couch was quite the scandal in its time. When asked whether she wasn't uncomfortable posing half-naked like that, Pauline reportedly responded, "Oh, no—the studio was quite warm."
Four rooms are each devoted to an early masterpiece by the baroque's greatest genius, Gianlorenzo Bernini. On the ground floor are his Aeneas and Anchises (1613), chipped out at the age of 15 with the help of his pop Pietro, and the Rape of Persephone (1621), in which Hades throws back his head in laughter as his strong hand presses into the fleshy thigh of the young goddess stuggling to break free.
Also here is Bernini's Apollo and Daphne (1624), in which the 26-year-old sculptor captures the moment the nymph's toes take root and her fingers and hair sprout leaves as her river god father sympathetically transforms her into a laurel tree to help her escape from a Cupid-struck Apollo hot on her heels. The lovelorn Apollo thereupon decreed that the laurel would become the tree closest to his heart, and thus were victors at games and at war ever after crowned with a wreath of its leaves.
Bernini's vibrant David (1623–24) is a resounding baroque answer to Michelangelo's Renaissance take on the same subject in Florence. The Renaissance David was pensive, all about proportion and philosophy. This baroque David is a man of action, twisting his body as he is about to let fly the stone from his sling. Bernini modeled the furrowed brow and bitten lip of David's face on his own mug.
Also on the ground floor is a room with (count 'em) five Caravaggio paintings, including the powerful Madonna of the Serpent, aka Madonna dei Palafrenieri (1605); the Young Bacchus, Ill (1653), the earliest surviving Caravaggio and said to be a self-portrait from when the painter had malaria; and the creepy David with the Head of Goliath (1610), in which Goliath's disembodied head may hold another self-portrait of the artist.
The second floor contains the rest of the painting collection, starring good works by Andrea del Sarto, Titian, Dürer, Rubens, Antonella da Messina, Pinturicchio, Correggio, and a large, masterful 1507 Deposition by the young Raphael.
In the northeast corner of Villa Borghese park, off Via Pinciana
For ticket reservations: tel. +39-06-32-810, www.ticketeria.it
For general info: tel. +39-06-854-8577, www.galleriaborghese.it
Closed Mondays
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This material was last updated January 2007. All information was accurate at the time.
Copyright © 1998-2008 by Reid Bramblett. All rights reserved.


