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Return to 19th-Century Architectural Views of Italy: 1850s-1860s

James Anderson - Temple of Vesta, Rome
Contact: Alex Novak and Marthe Smith
Email: info@vintageworks.net
Phone: +1-215-822-5662
United States of America
258 Inverness Circle
Chalfont, PA   18914  
Ref.#: 11760
Price: $12,000
Medium: Salt print from an albumen glass plate negative
Mount: on original mount
Image_Date: 1852c
Print_Date: 1852c
Dimensions: 10-3/4 x 14-1/2 in. (273 x 368 mm)
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Description:

Very rare and early large plate photographs from Anderson. Title written in period ink and Spithover blind stamp on recto of mount. The Temple of Vesta is an ancient edifice in Rome, Italy, located in the Roman Forum between the Temple of Castor and Pollux, the Temple of Caesar, the Regia and the House of the Vestal Virgins. The temple's most recognizable feature is its circular footprint which is most likely a remnant of an ancient Latin or Etruscan shrine. It is the oldest marble edifice to have survived in Rome. Although long known as the Temple of Vesta, it was in fact dedicated to Hercules Victor. This was the ancestral hearth of the Roman Nation, the place where the objects that Aeneas had bought from Troy were kept, and the temple that was guarded by the Vestal Virgins, the only female priesthood in Rome.

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