1 / 11

Tivoli : City of Water

Tivoli : City of Water . By Thomas Serafini and Filippo Morcella. Index. History Villa d’Este Villa Gregoriana. History.

sorcha
Télécharger la présentation

Tivoli : City of Water

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tivoli : City of Water By Thomas Serafini and Filippo Morcella

  2. Index • History • Villa d’Este • Villa Gregoriana

  3. History Tivoli was the ancient Roman city Tibur. Itstrades are confirmedby the Sanctuary of Hercules the winner , built in the II century. During the republican and imperialage Tivoli became full of rich Roman villas , suchas Villa Adriana, house of the EmperorHadrian. In the Middle Age Tivoli was a bishop’svenue and in the 1550 Cardinal Ippolito II d’Este wasappointedasgovernorto the city. Hepromoted the constructionof Villa d’Este.

  4. Villa d’Este Villa d’Este isone of the threevillas of Tivoli . Itwascommissionedby Cardinal Ippolito II d’Este , and was buildby Pirro Ligorio and Tommaso Chirurchi , the mostskilledhydraulicengineers of the sixteenthcentury . This villa isrich in pools, fountains , waterfalls and water jets

  5. Fontana dell’organo The organfountain was builtby Pirro Ligorio between 1568 and 1611 d.C . The fountain was built so that the water passingthrough the tubes, produce musical sounds . The fountainwasfixed in 2003 after a period of no service.

  6. The onehundredfountains Projectedby Pirro Ligorio the onehundredfountainsis a hallway, between Ovato and Romettafountains. Itisadornedwithsculpture of lilies, obelisks and eagles. Thesesymbolswereveryappreciatedby the Cardinal.

  7. Neptune’s fountain The hugest, mostscenographic and mostimportantfountain of the villa. It was builtby Attilio Rossi in 1927 . The highest part isformedby the balaustrade of the Organfountain. Between the base and the terracethere are 12 jets , 6 in the right part the other 6 in the left part.

  8. The dragons ‘s fountain Builtby Pirro Ligorio , thisfountainis the heart of Villa d’Este . Itrepresentsfourdragonsfightingoneanother. Accordingto a legend, thisfountainrepresents Hercules’s eleventhlabour : hehadtofightagainst the dragon Ladone

  9. Villa Gregoriana The placewherethis villa standswasveryimportantforcomunicationsthanksto Via Valeria thatpassednearby. This was a reasonwhy the acropolis of the city of Tibur and the first bridge on the riverwerebuilt in this area in pre-romantimes.

  10. Description This villa isset on a hillcalled “Villa Inferno” in front of a hugewaterfall . This area wassubjectedtoseasonaltides and floodsfrom the riversince the Roman times. Pope Gregory XVI ordered the construction of twoartificialcanals (more than 280 metres long) todivert the river out of the city. Villa Gregoriana wasmadeto celebrate thisimportantengineering project creating a majesticscenery .

  11. TWO differentkinds of topiarY art in Tivoli This villa representsanexample of Romantic gardening, while Villa D’esteis a clearexample of Reinassance Gardening . Bothvillas are the results of a skillfuluse of water resources. In the Renaissance Man wanted todemonstratehiscontrolover nature and gardenswereartificial, carefullyorganized and full of artisticartifacts . In the Romanticperiodfashionablegardenshad a more naturalaspect, withwaterfalls , shadowypaths and mysteriouscaves, buttheywereequally the result of careful planning and greatartisticskill.

More Related