- Dal Pozzo Tires
- Castello Dal Pozzo
- Cassiano Dal Pozzo Poussin
- The Paper Museum Of Cassiano Dal Pozzo
- Dal Pozzo Tires Goleta
- Cassiano dal Pozzo and Alchemy See more » Alessandro Albani. Alessandro Albani (15 October 1692 – 11 December 1779) was a prominent jurist and papal administrator, remembered best as a leading collector of antiquities and art patron in Rome. New!!: Cassiano dal Pozzo and Alessandro Albani See more » Alessandro Algardi.
- The ‘Paper Museum’ of Cassiano dal Pozzo is a collection of more than 7,000 watercolours, drawings and prints, today dispersed among the Royal Library at Windsor Castle, the British Library, the Institut de France and various other public and private collections.
Head of a European or Great White Pelican (Pelecanus onocrotalus) Vincenzo Leonardi (1589/90-1646) Rome, 1635. Watercolour and bodycolour, heightened with gum, over black chalk. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
CASSIANO DAL POZZO'S DRAWINGS OF CITRUS FRUITS. David Freedberg To claim that Giovanni Battista Ferrari's Hesperides, published in Rome in 1646, I is one of the greatest and most compendious citrological treatises ever written may not, these days, arouse more than passing attention. But no one who has looked at more than a few.
Rarely seen treasures from the Paper Museum amassed by a seventeenth century Roman antiquarian go on show this summer at the Barber Institute of Fine Arts in Birmingham
During the 17th century the antiquarian Cassiano dal Pozzo embarked upon an epic attempt to document and record the major fields of knowledge of his day.
Together with his younger brother Carlo Antonio he assembled what became known as the Museo Cartaceo or Paper Museum consisting of over 10,000 watercolours, drawings and prints illustrating subjects as diverse as antiquities, architecture, zoology, botany and geology, social customs and ceremonies, costumes, portraits, topography and military maps.
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Creating a visual record of the material world around them, their fascinating collection was one of the most significant attempts before the age of photography to embrace human knowledge in visual form.
Samnite Triple-Disc Breastplate Attributed to Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665), Rome, about 1635. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
Anatomical Details of the Common or Crested Porcupine (Hystrix cristata), Vincenzo Leonardi Rome, about 1630-40. Royal Collection Trust/© Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
Imaginary Reconstruction of an Ancient Amphitheatre, Attributed to Bernardo Capitelli (1590-1639) Rome, about 1625. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
Most of this remarkable paper assemblage was eventually acquired by George III in 1762, and it is still part of the Royal Collection today and this exhibition – the first in more than 20 years dedicated to Cassiano’s remarkable contribution to art and science – is part of a collaboration between the Barber Institute and Royal Collection Trust and has been curated by University of Birmingham MA Art History and Curating Students.
It includes more than 40 objects, including 17 ‘Paper Museum’ works lent by Her Majesty The Queen, some of which have never been publicly displayed before.
“Cassiano was operating at a fascinating moment,” says Robert Wenley, the Barber’s Deputy Director and Head of Collections who has been acting as mentor to the student curators. “It is important to remember that he was accumulating the material for the Paper Museum at a time when educated people were moving away from a medieval world-view to a more science-based one, but to promote progressive views at a time of religious orthodoxy was fraught with danger.”
Cassiano was secretary to Cardinal Francesco Barberini and both men were members of the famous Accademia dei Lincei (‘The Academy of the Lynxes’), established in Rome in 1603. Its membership, which included Galileo, placed great emphasis on observation as a key to understanding and the Academy was named after the wild lynx cat, which was known for having especially sharp eyesight.
Dal Pozzo Tires
Fingered Lemon (Citrus limon) Vincenzo Leonardi Rome, about 1640. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
Head of a European or Great White Pelican (Pelecanus onocrotalus) Vincenzo Leonardi (1589/90-1646) Rome, 1635. Watercolour and bodycolour, heightened with gum, over black chalk. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
CASSIANO DAL POZZO'S DRAWINGS OF CITRUS FRUITS. David Freedberg To claim that Giovanni Battista Ferrari's Hesperides, published in Rome in 1646, I is one of the greatest and most compendious citrological treatises ever written may not, these days, arouse more than passing attention. But no one who has looked at more than a few.
Rarely seen treasures from the Paper Museum amassed by a seventeenth century Roman antiquarian go on show this summer at the Barber Institute of Fine Arts in Birmingham
During the 17th century the antiquarian Cassiano dal Pozzo embarked upon an epic attempt to document and record the major fields of knowledge of his day.
Together with his younger brother Carlo Antonio he assembled what became known as the Museo Cartaceo or Paper Museum consisting of over 10,000 watercolours, drawings and prints illustrating subjects as diverse as antiquities, architecture, zoology, botany and geology, social customs and ceremonies, costumes, portraits, topography and military maps.
more like this
Creating a visual record of the material world around them, their fascinating collection was one of the most significant attempts before the age of photography to embrace human knowledge in visual form.
Samnite Triple-Disc Breastplate Attributed to Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665), Rome, about 1635. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
Anatomical Details of the Common or Crested Porcupine (Hystrix cristata), Vincenzo Leonardi Rome, about 1630-40. Royal Collection Trust/© Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
Imaginary Reconstruction of an Ancient Amphitheatre, Attributed to Bernardo Capitelli (1590-1639) Rome, about 1625. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
Most of this remarkable paper assemblage was eventually acquired by George III in 1762, and it is still part of the Royal Collection today and this exhibition – the first in more than 20 years dedicated to Cassiano’s remarkable contribution to art and science – is part of a collaboration between the Barber Institute and Royal Collection Trust and has been curated by University of Birmingham MA Art History and Curating Students.
It includes more than 40 objects, including 17 ‘Paper Museum’ works lent by Her Majesty The Queen, some of which have never been publicly displayed before.
“Cassiano was operating at a fascinating moment,” says Robert Wenley, the Barber’s Deputy Director and Head of Collections who has been acting as mentor to the student curators. “It is important to remember that he was accumulating the material for the Paper Museum at a time when educated people were moving away from a medieval world-view to a more science-based one, but to promote progressive views at a time of religious orthodoxy was fraught with danger.”
Cassiano was secretary to Cardinal Francesco Barberini and both men were members of the famous Accademia dei Lincei (‘The Academy of the Lynxes’), established in Rome in 1603. Its membership, which included Galileo, placed great emphasis on observation as a key to understanding and the Academy was named after the wild lynx cat, which was known for having especially sharp eyesight.
Dal Pozzo Tires
Fingered Lemon (Citrus limon) Vincenzo Leonardi Rome, about 1640. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
Imaginary Reconstruction of a Roman Public Banquet. Attributed to Bernardino Capitelli Rome, about 1625. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
“In an age when excavated fragments of mammoths’ tusks were still interpreted as the bones of giants, the tribulations of Cassiano’s friend Galileo at the hands of the church bear testimony to this,” adds Wenley. “Dal Pozzo had to walk a fine line due to his closeness to the Papal household, while at the same time working at what was then the cutting edge of scientific thought and discovery.”
Galileo’s run-in with the Roman Inquisition – who declared his ‘heliocentric’ theories about the transit of the earth around the sun to be heretical – meant he spent the final ten years of his life under house arrest, although his fellow Accademia dei Lincei member Cardinal Barberini refused to condemn him.
Meanwhile the ever curious eye of Cassiano did not simply seek to chart the natural world or even the universe; it seemed that anything and everything held wonderment for him and his brother.
Their friend Nicolas Poussin is believed to have contributed a drawing of a Samnite Triple-Disc Breastplate (c.1635), while what were thought to be Early Christian Martyr’s Chains – attributed to Leonardi (c.1646) – further reveal dal Pozzo’s desire to create an exhaustive record of the objects around him. Drawings of a Roman banquet, St Peter’s, a boxer’s hands and mosaics are also featured.
Lapidary and ‘figured’ Stones, Corals, Fossils, semi-precious Stones and Minerals, Vincenzo Leonardi Rome, about 1630-40. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
Castello Dal Pozzo
Early Christian Martyr’s Chains, Vincenzo Leonardi, Rome, about 1646. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
Cassiano Dal Pozzo Poussin
Two Views of a Hand wearing a Caestus and holding Weights. Attributed to Vincenzo Leonardi Rome, about 1644. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
The Paper Museum Of Cassiano Dal Pozzo
One of the key exhibits is a sheet of specimens of Corals, Fossils, semi-precious Stones and Minerals (attributed to Vincenzo Leonardi, c.1630-40), which shows 25 individual geological samples and fossils. Actual examples of 22 of these have been loaned to the Barber Institute’s exhibition by the world-leading Lapworth Museum of Geology, also on the University of Birmingham campus, enabling the drawing to be ‘recreated’ using physical samples.
The University’s Cadbury Research Library has also collaborated and loaned three artefacts; a copy of Historiae Animalium (Conradi Gesneri, 1511), the Supplément au livre de l’antiquité expliquée et répresentée en figures (Bernard de Montfaucon, 1757) and Ulisse Aldrovandi’s Monstrorum Historia (1642).
Aldrovandi is considered the founder of modern Natural History, and his Monstrorum is an intriguing and curious collection of depictions of mythical beasts – including a cockatrice, harpy and chimera – and human deformities, represented by drawings of conjoined twins, a baby with one arm and a man with a cutaneous horn growing from the top of his head.
Cassiano’s interests may not have been so overtly monstrous but his paper wunderkammer continues to offer a fascinating link to a world of science, art, learning and knowledge that still resonates with the world around us today.
Mosaic Emblema: Marsh Scene with Birds. Unidentified Italian artist, Rome, about 1627. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
St Peter’s, Rome: Michelangelo’s Project Plan. Unknown Italian artist, circle of Michelangelo (1475-1564), Rome, about 1550. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019
THE PAPER MUSEUM: The Curious Eye of Cassiano dal Pozzo is at the Barber Institute of Fine Arts from June 14 – September 1 2019. Admission free.
Dal Pozzo Tires Goleta
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The Barber Institute of Fine Arts
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Monet, Manet, and Magritte; Renoir, Rubens, Rossetti and Rodin; Degas, Delacroix and Van Dyck — not to mention Turner, Gainsborough, Gauguin, Van Gogh and Picasso… You can see major works by all these great artists in the Barber Institute of Fine Arts, at the University of Birmingham. There’s also a…