Galleria Spada
The Galleria Spada is a museum in Rome, which is housed in the Palazzo Spada on Piazza Capo di Ferro. The palazzo is also famous for its façade and for the forced perspective gallery by Francesco Borromini.
The gallery exhibits paintings from the 16th and 17th centuries. A state museum, it is managed by the Polo Museale del Lazio.
History
The building now housing the Galleria Spada was originally built in 1540 for Cardinal Girolamo Capodiferro. Bartolomeo Baronino, of Casale Monferrato, was the architect, while Giulio Mazzoni and a team provided lavish stuccowork inside and out. The palazzo was purchased by Cardinal Spada in 1632. He commissioned the Baroque architect Francesco Borromini to modify it for him, and it was Borromini who created the masterpiece of forced perspective optical illusion in the arcaded courtyard, in which diminishing rows of columns and a rising floor create the visual illusion of a gallery 37 meters long with a lifesize sculpture at the end of the vista, in daylight beyond; the sculpture is 60 cm high. Borromini was aided in his perspective trick by a mathematician.The building was purchased in November 1926 by the Italian State to house the gallery and the State Council. The Galleria was opened in 1927 in the Palazzo Spada. It closed during the 1940s, but reopened in 1951 thanks to the efforts of the Conservator of the Galleries of Rome, Achille Bertini Calosso and the Director, Federico Zeri. Zeri was committed to locating the remaining artwork that had been scattered during the war, as he intended to recreate the original layout of the 16th–17th version of the gallery, including the placement of the pictures, the furniture and the sculptures. Most of the exhibited artwork comes predominantly from the private collection of Bernardino Spada, supplemented by smaller collections such as that of Virgilio Spada.
Description
The museum is located on the first floor of Palazzo Spada, in the wing that used to belong to Cardinal Girolamo Capodiferro. The Cardinal had built the museum over the historical remains of his family's former home that had been established in 1548.;Room I
The room is called the Room of the Popes because of its fifty inscriptions describing the lives of select pontiffs, as commissioned by Cardinal Bernardino. It is also known as the Room with the Azure Ceiling because the ceiling is covered with a turquoise canvas divided into many little compartments marked "camerini da verno". The ceiling coffers' decorations date back to 1777.
Among the paintings in this room are:
- Portrait of Cardinal Bernardino Spada by Guido Reni
- Portrait of Cardinal Bernardino Spada by Guercino
- Portrait of Cardinal Fabrizio Spada by Sebastiano Ceccarini
- Two Still Lifes by Onofrio Loth
- Four Ovidian mythological scenes by Giuseppe Bartolomeo Chiari
- *Apollo and Daphne
- *Latona curses the Lycians transforming them into Frogs
- *Mercury entrusts Bacchus to the Nymphs
- *Bacchus and Ariadne
- Four vedute by Hendrik van Lint
- Four battle scenes by Jacques Courtois
Among the works in this room are:
- Fresco frieze by Perino del Vaga, now replaced by friezes by Andrea Gennaroli and by François Perrier
- Road to Calvary by Marco Palmezzano
- Portrait of a Botanist, Nobleman, and King David by Bartolomeo Passerotti
- Portrait of a Violinist by Titian
- Four Stories of the Old Testament by Andrea Donducci
- Some Madonnas by the Umbrian School
- The Visitation by Andrea del Sarto
- Portrait of Pope Julius III by Girolamo Siciolante da Sermoneta
- Saint Cristopher and Saint Luke by Amico Aspertini
Among the paintings here are:
- Frescoes depicting Allegories of the Four Continents, Elements, and Seasons; Trophies and Armor; scenes from Ovid's Metamorphoses in Frieze by Michelangelo Ricciolini
- Allegory of Architecture, Sculpture and Painting offering gifts to Minerva, protector of Arts also by Ricciolini
- Landscape with Deer-hunt by Niccolò dell'Abate
- Vestals by Ciro Ferri
- Landscapes with Windmills by Jan Brueghel the Elder
- The Kidnapping of Helen copy of original by Guido Reni, painted by Giacinto Campana
- The Meeting of Mark Antony and Cleopatra by Francesco Trevisani
- The Massacre of the Innocents and The Sacrifice of Iphiginea by Pietro Testa
- The Astronomers by Niccolò Tornioli
- Triumph of the Name of Jesus, a sketch for the ceiling of the Gesù by Giovanni Battista Gaulli
- The Death of Dido by Guercino
Artworks
The most important artworks are:- Michelangelo Cerquozzi: The Revolt of Masaniello
- Giovan Battista Gaulli : Christ and the Samaritan
- Artemisia Gentileschi: Saint Cecilia; The Virgin and Child
- Orazio Gentileschi: David with the Head of Goliath
- Guercino: Portrait of Cardinal Bernardino Spada
- Giovanni Lanfranco: Cain and Abel
- Giovanni Andrea Donducci : Tales
- Parmigianino : Three Heads
- Mattia Preti: Christ Tempted by Satan; Christ and the Woman Taken in Adultery
- Guido Reni: Portrait of Cardinal Bernardino Spada; Saint Jerome
- Pieter van Laer : Storm; Nocturne
- Peter Paul Rubens
- Albrecht Dürer
- Caravaggio
- Domenichino
- Annibale Carracci
- Salvator Rosa
- Francesco Solimena