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The Grand Tour
With roots going back to the late 16th century and continuing until the early 19th century, the Grand Tour informally began as an aristocratic tour of select fashionable European cities. Reserved primarily for wealthy, educated young men from across Europe and even as far away as America, these Grand Tourists journeyed throughout the European continent as a way to bolster their own education and knowledge of art, architecture, and culture. Later evolving into a more formal journey often in addition to, or replacing a traditional university education, the Grand Tour became a kind of wandering academy which reached its height in the 18th century. Rome filled with newly rediscovered ancient beauty and a flourishing contemporary art scene was the pinnacle of any Grand Tourist’s itinerary. As such, souvenirs often from Italy, in the form of ancient sculptures, self-portraits, paintings of romantic views, and silver were brought back or commissioned upon return to adorn the young man’s country estate or urban townhome as visual evidence of the owner’s intellectual sophistication.
John Deare
Judgment of Jupiter, 1786-1787
Pompeo Batoni
Portrait of Sir Wyndham Knatchbull-Wyndham, 1758-1759
Unknown
The Hope Athena, 2nd century A.D. Roman copy after a Greek Original of the 5th century B.C.
Unknown
The Lansdowne Bust of Athena of Velletri, 2nd-century copy after a Greek original of circa 430–420 B.C. by Kresilas
Guido Reni
Bacchus and Ariadne, circa 1619-1620
Carl May
Model of the Arch of the Argentarii, circa 1792-1795
Attributed to Python
Bell-Krater with (A) the Centaur Chiron Accompanied by a Satyr and (B) Two Youths, circa 350-325 B.C.
Francesco Piranesi
Illumination of the Cross in St. Peter's on Good Friday, 1787
Giovanni Antonio Canal (called Canaletto)
Piazza San Marco Looking South and West, 1763
Katsushika Hokusai
South Wind, Clear Dawn, circa 1830-1831
Francesco Panini
St. Peter's, the Basilica and the Piazza, no date
Giovanni Battista Piranesi
Part of a spacious and magnificent Harbor for the use of the ancient Romans opening onto a large market square..., 1761-mid 1780s
Giovanni Battista Piranesi
View of the Temple of Bacchus, now the church of San Urbano, two miles distant from Rome, beyond the Porta San Sebastiano..., circa 1760-1778
Giovanni Battista Piranesi
View of the Pantheon of Agrippa, today Santa Maria ad Martyres, circa 1761
Giuseppe Vasi
Basilica of Saint Peter's, Vatican, circa 1753
Giovanni Battista Piranesi
View of the Baths of Titus, circa 1775
Giovanni Battista Piranesi
Ancient Forum Surrounded by Porticoes, circa 1743
Michele Marieschi
The Grand Canal Between San Simone Piccolo and Santa Chiara, circa 1740-1741