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Piranesi prisons
Piranesi prisons





  1. Piranesi prisons how to#
  2. Piranesi prisons series#

3 Many catalogues of his work have been compiled, a few of which have served as guides for further investigation. Since then, the artist has been the subject of much research. An interactive map of Rome has been developed for this exhibition, showing points referring to places (churches and monuments) that Piranesi recorded in his Vedute di Roma series.Ī catalogue raisonné appeared fourteen years after Piranesi died. The publication of this collection catalogue was timed to coincide with an exhibition being staged in Depot Boijmans Van Beuningen from 14 November 2022 to 5 March 2023. As you enter, your eyes are drawn to the maze of staircases zig-zagging all the way to the top of the building. The collection is held in Depot Boijmans Van Beuningen, where Piranesi’s work appears to have become reality. The scope and quality of the collection were the stimulus to develop an online collection catalogue. The Rotterdam Piranesi Collection has long been well known for its superior quality and the number of early impressions and copies. The collection is not complete, but it is the most comprehensive museum collection in the Netherlands.

Piranesi prisons series#

2 Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen holds 751 Piranesi prints, many of which are in series or bound into books. At the end of his life there were three hundred unbound copies in his workshop. Altogether he created twelve different books of prints.

Piranesi prisons how to#

It was the ideal place to learn how to compile print books. Piranesi lived in Rome, which in the eighteenth century was a hub of book and print publishers. 1 These etchings were published mostly in the form of series or books of prints. He created over a thousand etchings, which represents an average output of 2.3 prints a month. The Italian artist made a huge number of prints, chiefly during the last thirty years of his life. The story of Piranesi as a maker of books of prints and his world on paper, including watermark research, was at the heart of the project. The research was made possible by a grant from the Mondriaan Fund. This online collection catalogue is the result of a two-year research project into all the prints by Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720-1778) in the museum’s collection.







Piranesi prisons