Trevi Fountain

Item

Title
Trevi Fountain
Alternative Title
Fontana di Trevi
Creator
Nicola Salvi (Italian architect, 1697-1751)
Drafter
Penel, Jules (French engraver and architectural engraver, born 1833)
City
Rome, Lazio, Italy
GPS
54.384042
Location
Italy
Building Creation Date
1732-1762 (creation)
Century
18th century
Description
perspective of the Trevi Fountain
plan of the Trevi Fountain
perspective and plan of the fountain at Piazza Madonna dei Monti
, exterior perspectives
Its construction was extremely protracted, but as early as 1735 the architectural framework was complete, and by Salvi's death the ornamental rock formations and full-scale models of most of the sculpture were in place. The fountain is the most monumental water display in Rome and represents the culmination of a tradition of combining water and sculpture within an elaborate architectural setting. Salvi treated an existing façade of the Palazzo Poli as a nine-bay unit with the central three bays articulated with attached Corinthian columns suggesting an antique triumphal arch. The central bay is treated as a giant niche, which frames Maini's free-standing figure of Oceanus, from which the sculptural scheme and the waters of the fountain seem to flow into a large rock basin. An attic storey above the central niche is surmounted by a coat of arms of Clement XII and incorporates statues representing the Four Seasons, part of a complex iconographic scheme emphasizing the important role of water in nature.
Techniques
line drawings (drawings)
Classification
Architectural Documentation
Documentation Type
illustrations
plans
Style/Period
Baroque
Cultural Context
Italian
Subject
allegorical
architectural exteriors
mythology (Classical)
Architecture, Baroque
Fountains
Oceanus (Greek deity)
capital: Corinthian
pilaster: compound
Source
Letarouilly, Paul Marie. Edifices de Rome Moderne. Paris: A. Morel, 1868, 347.
Access Rights
Public Domain
creator
Salvi, Nicola

Nicola Salvi (Italian architect, 1697-1751), “Trevi Fountain”, Arch Design Images, accessed November 14, 2024, https://exhibits.lib.ttu.edu/s/archlib/item/19038