Giovanni Barracco. Patriota e collezionista

Immagine: 
Giovanni Barracco, collector and patriot
19/09/2010 - 09/01/2011
Museo di Scultura Antica Giovanni Barracco

In the framework of the celebrations for "Roma: Capitale d’Italia da 140 anni”, an exhibition dedicated to Giovanni Barracco - a refined collector of ancient sculpture, deputy and senator of the first parliament of united Italy - in the museum that bears his name.

Giovanni Barracco was born in Isola Capo Rizzuto in1829, a noble and ancient family of large landowners. In his youth, which he spent between Calabria and Naples, Barracco studied classics and was imbued with a deep sense of patriotism that exposed him to the ideals of the Risorgimento, even to the point of financing the of Garibaldi’s undertaking.
In 1861 he sat in the first parliament of united Italy, based in Turin. Here, in the city of the Royal Museum of Egyptian Antiquities, Barracco’s political activity became intertwined with a deep passion for collecting Egyptian art. Thus began his collection of ancient sculpture, with purchases from antique markets ranging from Egyptian to Assyrian and from Cypriot and Etruscan art, from Greek to Roman sculpture, to medieval art.
In the Parliament, where she sat for more than 50 years, Barracco coped with the problems of Calabria, but also with "Fine Arts". After the transfer of the Parliament to Rome in 1870, Barracco contributed to the season of archaeological discoveries connected with the works for Roma Capitale. By the last years of the XIX century, the collection had grown so much that he embarked on the ambitious project to create a "Museum of Ancient Sculpture."
The museum, housed in a building erected for the purpose, was donated in the early XX century to the City of Rome; after the demolition of the building for urban renewal in 1938, the collection is now exhibited in the XVI century “Farnesina ai Baullari”.
Among the works in the collection, the exhibition highlights the beautiful head of the Pharaoh Seti I (XIX Dynasty, early XIII century BC), which is drawn close to a fragment of a statue found at Grottaferrata and preserved in the Museum of the Abbey of St. Nile. Barracco may be referring to the purchase of the head in a letter to Barnabei, when he writes: "Eureka! I found the Pharaoh I wanted,” expressing the joy of the collector for the conquest of a new, valuable object for his collection.

Information

Lieu
Museo di Scultura Antica Giovanni Barracco
Horaire

September 19, 2010 - January 9, 2011
Tuesday-Sunday: 9.00 am - 7.00 pm;
December 24 and 31: 9.00 am - 2.00 pm;
Last admission 1/2 hour before closing time;
Closed: Monday, December 25, January 1.

Billet d'entrée

Adults: € 4,50
Concessions: € 3,50

September 19, 2010: Free Admission
Gratuity and Concessions

Information

+39 060608 (every day from 9.00 a.m to 9.00 p.m.)

Typologie
Exposition|Archéologie
Site Web
Sponsorisé par

Banche Tesoriere del Comune di Roma: BNL – Gruppo BNP Paribas, UniCredit - Banca di Roma, Monte dei Paschi di Siena; Il Gioco del Lotto; Atac; Vodafone

Avec la contribution technique de

La Repubblica

Jours de fermeture
Lun
Commissaire
Maddalena Cima
20101220
64546
Roma Città Natale 2010
Musei in Comune -
Vari luoghi
20/12/2010 - 09/01/2011
Evénement|Evénements
20101202
63596
Museo di Scultura Antica Giovanni Barracco
02/12/2010 - 04/01/2011
Didactique pour tous

Eventi correlati

Il n'y a pas des activités en cours.
Il n'y a pas d'activités en programme.
Il n'y a pas d'activités en archive.