About this Travel Course
Course Description
This is an outdoor sketchbook drawing intensive guided and inspired by the contributions of Giovanni Battista Piranesi. The impact of the venetian engraver, widely known for his picturesque illustrations of eighteenth-century Rome and his fantastical views of imaginary architecture, is still palpable in guiding our preconceptions of the Roman world, its cannon of architecture and art, and shapes our recollections of the Eternal City. This course will retrace his steps through frequent visits to historical locations and garner new perspectives on Piranesi from our personal experiences, literally drawing from his point of view.
Aside from his facility as a printmaker and one of the most interesting enlightenment figures working in Rome in the 18th century, Giovanni Battista Piranesi was also a skilled architect, surveyor, curator, antiquarian, urbanist and archaeologist, creating one of the most fully visualized records of roman antiquities in his day. His associations with engineers, scenographers, historians, and cartographers unquestionably shaped his imagination and
helped to posit a theoretical framework of the Eternal City around the ideas of pictorial space and perspective. Through the proliferation of his images and the vast catalog of his engravings, the “art and mind” of Piranesi continues to inspire the visits of artists and tourists to Rome, central to the scholarly pursuits of the Grand Tour which was at the forefront of Piranesi’s life.
This course will provide both a site-specific historical overview of the ancient city as well as a practicum in the image-making techniques used by Piranesi. Demonstrations, walking tours and visits to archives and collections, will complement the student’s own discoveries while developing a personal sketchbook practice in the intensive three-week course.
Our studio environment is predominantly outdoors in both urban and rural environments under the intense heat of the Roman summer. Students should be prepared for extended periods outdoor working and walking or hiking to reach drawing sites.
Course Objectives
- Understand the complexities of the Eternal City through the history of an equally complex figure whose name is synonymous with Rome of the 18th century – understand Piranesi’s continued relevance, scholarship, and his legacy as an ambassador to art and design students in Rome within his numerous practices.
- Produce original work from Piranesi’s techniques of field drawing and building survey, vanishing point perspective, and other approaches of archaeological illustration and the drawing of cities and landscapes through “vedute.”
- Visit and draw streetscapes, landscapes, and sites of antiquity through the eyes of Piranesi –visit and study works from the archives, museums and archeological sites that are intrinsically linked to the life and work of Piranesi.
- Participate in workshops and interpret assigned readings with experts on the work of Piranesi, the history of 18th c. image-making, urbanism, architecture, archaeology, cartography and the cultural geographies of the cities we will visit
- Comprehended Piranesi’s legacy on the role of “tourism” and dismantle the most superficial perceptions of Piranesi’s body of work and the places he depicted.
Housing
To participate in RISD Global Summer Studies, all students are required to stay in RISD- provided housing for the duration of the course.