Saturday, 1 December 2012

5 Star Hotel Chicago - The Vatican Museums - Every Visitor to Rome Must See This Amazing Art Showcase


There are such books in the Vatican library that catalog every work this important collection owns and when and where they are on display, in fact. It would fill a book, and if we tried to list the number of artists and great works of art you can find in the Vatican Museums! We could use all of the time we have to discuss the Vatican Museums just listing the vast number of galleries and museums that make up this big collection of art showcases.

The Vatican collection has grown to dozens of galleries and museums and to literally thousands of works of fine art, from there. It was Pope Julius II who in 1506 started the Vatican's collection of great art with his purchase of the sculpture Laocoon and his sons as they battle a mighty sea creature.

The artwork of Etruria resembles the ancient mosaics and historic sarcophagi of Egypt that were collected at the height of the Roman Empire. This collection is one of the youngest in the Vatican family and holds many ancient works that were excavated in southern Etruria and surrounding vicinities and brought to Rome to be on display, despite the older date to us. One of the many Museums in the Vatican community of art is the Etruscan Museum that was established in 1837.

The first time these weaves were put on display was in 1814 and their artistry is so exquisite that any great museum in the world would welcome them to their collections. Another wonderful collection is the Gallery of Tapestries which consists of wall hangings from the fifteenth century forward to the seventeenth century.

It's interesting to reflect that these kinds of location tools came before GPS and other modern toys we use and they were the only means the explorers that ventured out from Italy found many of the lands of the new world. These maps are both very artistic and fascinating as well. Painted directly on the gallery walls are 40 panels representing regions of the world in map form. The variety of the Vatican Museums continues at the Gallery of Maps.

Not because they are devoted to showcasing his art, it is interesting that the rooms were named that way because of the work Raphael himself did in decorating each room. In those four rooms are some of the great works of the famous artist Raphael. That were constructed between 1447 and 1455, there you will find four rooms all connected. The Raphael Rooms are not to be missed if you are scheduling some time to see the Vatican Museums.

Poussin and Giotto, perugino, but it is definitely worth a visit to see great art by some of the great masters of history including Van Dyck. It doesn't take much guessing to know what is in the Vatican Picture Gallery.

This interesting collection was opened in 1970 to showcase Roman sculptures from the Republican and Imperial eras such as well as sarcophagi and things of that nature. "profane art" simply means that the subject matter of the art is not sacred in nature, in the context of this being one of the Vatican Museums. How language is used may give you the wrong impression of what you will see in the Gregorian Museum of Profane Art because you will not find dirty pictures here.

As well as the harnesses for the horses and other support items that were used for upkeep and documentation of these vehicles, you will also find supplemental items like pictures of parades or times when Popes were in processions, along with the many carriages you can inspect in the Carriage Pavilion. The building is located under the Square Garden and it is used to display the vehicles that have been used over the centuries for the Pope and other high Vatican officials to ride in. The Carriage Pavilion opened, three years after the opening of the Gregorian Museum of Profane Art.

Which he came back and added to the chapel 20 years later, but don't miss out on Michelangelo's Last Judgment. As you gaze up you will know this is a moment you will remember for life. To take in the huge masterpiece that Michelangelo painted on the Chapel ceiling, but there is no question that the crowning moment of any visit to the Vatican Museums will be the time you spend in the world renowned Sistine Chapel.

The famous writer Goethe summed up the feeling you get when you see that painting when he said: Sibyls and the crowning moment in the piece as God himself reaches out to touch Adam's finger and give him life, a number of unknown male nudes, there you will witness nine panels that are used to depict Biblical characters including Noah. Nothing will be able to take the place of the impression you will get gazing at that ceiling.

" One can form no appreciable idea of what one man is capable of achieving, "Without having seen the Sistine Chapel.

Goethe's words could easily to applied to hundreds of other outstanding art works by hundreds of master artists whose work is on display in the many buildings of the Vatican Museums.

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