Interior of the Pantheon, Rome

Description

Created as a temple under the Roman emperor Hadrian around the year AD 125, the Pantheon became a Christian church in 609. Significant restoration took place in the early 1700s, a period of renewed attention to early Christian monuments. The site was a major monument of antiquity, an active church, and its portico, visible through the door, held the most important art fair in the city. Panini shows the complexity of this public space by representing foreign tourists, local churchgoers, Roman nobles, and artists mingling under the dome.

Provenance

Tyrwhitt-Drake ("Shardeloes," Amersham, Buckinghamshire, UK) (sold, Christie’s, London, July 25, 1952, no. 148, to Reder); 1952 - Reder; David Koetser (New York, New York); - 1969 Walter P. Chrysler; 1969 - 1974 Eugene V. Thaw (New York, New York), sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art.

Interior of the Pantheon, Rome

Giovanni Paolo Panini

1747

Accession Number

1974.39

Medium

oil on canvas

Dimensions

Framed: 147.5 x 120 x 5 cm (58 1/16 x 47 1/4 x 1 15/16 in.); Unframed: 127 x 97.8 cm (50 x 38 1/2 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund