Museums & Galleries of Rome
Museum Galleria Borghese
Villa Borghese
Drawn from the collection assembled by Cardinal Scipione Borghese in
the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, the Borghese Gallery
includes major works by Raphael, Rubens, Titian, Caravaggio, Bernini,
Antonello da Messina and Canova.
Housed in the 'casino' (summerhouse) of the Villa Borghese, which was
built between 1613 and 1616, the collection was purchased by the state
with the villa and its contents in 1902. Recently reopened following
a fourteen-year renovation program, the architecture and decoration
of the gallery create the perfect setting for the magnificent paintings
and sculptures.
Opening: 9:00 am - 7:00 pm Tuesday to Saturday,
9:00 am - 1:00 pm Sunday.
October to April: 9:00 am - 2:00 pm Tuesday to Sunday
Galleria Colonna
Via della Pilotta
The construction of the magnificent Galleria Colonna in the huge complex
of Palazzo Colonna began in 1654 and took 50 years, its grandeur reflecting
the nobility of the Colonna family.
The gallery was conceived as a work of art in itself and the magnificent
Baroque setting contributes to the presentation of the displayed masterpieces
by artists including Lorenzo Monaco, Bronzino, Ghirlandaio, Salviati,
Veronese, Palma il Vecchio, Jacopo and Domenico Tintoretto, Pietro da
Cortona, Annibale Carracci, Francesco Albani, Guercino, Guido Reni,
Carlo Maratta, Gaspard Dughet, Crescenzio Onofri, Girolamo Muziano,
and Pompeo Batoni.
Opening: 9:00 am - 1:00 pm Saturday, closed August
Barberini Palace and National Gallery of Antique Art
Via Quattro Fontane 13
The Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica is located on two sites; the Palazzo
Corsini and the Palazzo Barberini. One of the grandest palaces in Rome,
the Palazzo Barberini was built in the early seventeenth century, showing
the architectural influence and design of Maderno, Borromini and Bernini.
The interior is equally impressive, featuring the most famous work of
Pietro da Cortona on the ceiling of the Salone, which took six years
to complete. The Barberini collection is mainly of Italian painting
of the thirteenth to sixteenth centuries with works by Fra Angelico,
Filippo Lippi, Lorenzo Lotto, Andrea del Sarto, Perugino, Caravaggio,
Canaletto and Raphael.
Opening: 9:00 am - 7:00 pm Tuesday to Saturday
9:00 am - 1:00 pm Sundays and holidays
Doria Pamphili Gallery
Piazza del Collegio Romano
The recently refurbished Galleria, inside the majestic Palazzo Doria
Pamphili dating from the fifteenth century, houses one of Rome's most
distinguished private art collections, including works by Caravaggio,
Titian, Raphael, Velázquez, Lippi, Lotto, Rubens, Guercino, Reni,
Parmigianino, Bellini and Brueghel.
Opening: 10:00 am - 5:00 pm, closed Thursday
Modern National Gallery
Viale delle Belle Arti
The Modern National Gallery houses the most important Italian collection
of paintings and sculptures of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Works by artists belonging to most of the contemporary art movements
are represented as well as neo-classicism, romanticism and Tuscan Macchiaoli
impressionism. The gallery's exhibits include works by Goya, Géricault,
Delacroix, Blake, Renoir, Rossetti, Courbet, Van Gogh, Degas, Monet,
Cezanne, Modigliani, Mondrian, Duchamp, de Chirico, Cara, Miró,
Kandinsky and Klimt.
Opening: 9:00 am - 7:00 pm Tuesday to Saturday
9:00 am - 1:00 pm Sundays and holidays
Gallery of the National Academy of St. Luca
Via dell'Accademia di S. Luca
One of Rome's most prestigious galleries, Galleria dell'Accademia di
San Luca was founded as an art academy in 1478 with the statute that
"every member should donate a work to its perpetual memory".
Through these gifts, combined with other bequests and donations, the
gallery contains an eclectic collection of classical works by artists
such as Raphael, Canova, van Dyck, Titian, Guercino, il Sassoferrato,
Reni and Pietro da Cortona.
Opening: 10:00 am - 12:30 pm Monday, Wednesday and Friday, closed 1st
August until September 14th
Corsini Gallery
Via della Lungara
The other site of the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica, the Palazzo
Corsini was originally built in the fifteenth century, but was considerably
remodelled in the eighteenth. It is a relatively small, attractive gallery
containing a large oeuvre of seventeenth and eighteenth century regional
Italian painting as well as works by Rubens, Murrillo, Poussin, Brueghel
and Caravaggio.
Opening: 9:00 am - 7:00 pm Tuesday to Friday
9:00 am - 2:00 pm Saturday
9:00 am - 1:00 pm Sunday and holidays
Spada Gallery
Piazza Capo di Ferro
The Galleria Spada, behind the majestic sixteenth century Palazzo Spada,
exhibits the Spada family collection of works mainly from the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries, as well as some second and third century Roman
sculptures. Artists in the collection include Rubens, Durer, Caravaggio,
Guercino, Domenichino, Guido Reni, Carracci, Salvator Rosa, Passarotti,
Parmigianino, Solimena and del Sarto. In the General Council Chamber
of the Palazzo is a colossal statue of Pompey, which is traditionally
the one at the foot of which Julius Caesar was murdered.
Opening: 9:00 am - 7:00 pm Tuesday to Saturday
9:00 am - 1:00 pm Sundays and holidays
Musei Capitolini
Piazza del Campidoglio 1
The collection of the Musei Capitolini is one of the oldest in the
world. It was started in 1471 by Pope Sixtus IV who presented the city
with a number of bronze statues. It now houses a collection of Roman
sculptures, such as the famous 'Lupa Capitolina', inscriptions, coins,
mosaics, and objects connected with everyday life. The collection also
contains Greek, Etruscan and Egyptian works of art. The museum's collection
of marble sculptures and inscriptions was greatly enlarged in the 17th
and 18th centuries by gifts from private collections. After Rome became
Italy's capital in the 19th century, a great number of artefacts, found
whilst digging the foundations for the city's new quarters, joined the
collection. The collection is exhibited in two palaces: the 17th-century
Museo Capitolino and the 15th-century Palazzo dei Conservatori, which
also houses the famous Conservatori Apartment well known for its large
frescoes. The Palazzo dei Conservatori has been enlarged twice this
century, once in 1925 and again in 1950. An underground gallery, excavated
in the 1940s, houses a collection of Latin and Greek inscriptions. The
painting gallery or Pinacoteca is famous for its Italian and foreign
masterpieces by such artists as Titian, Veronese, Tintoretto, Caravaggio
and Rubens.
Opening: Tuesday-Sunday 09.00-19.00 Closed: Monday
Etruscan National Museum of Villa Giulia
p.le di Villa Giulia, 9
Villa Giulia was built for pope Julius III between 1550 and 1555, and
many of the most important architects, painters and decorators of the
period, from Vasari to Vignola and Ammannati contributed to its execution.
The complex of the villa includes two courtyards divided by a nymphaeum
which originally was a proper water theatre. The interiors of the villa
were richly decorated with frescoes, stuccoes, polychrome marbles, and
statues. After the pope's death the villa was inherited by his brother
and later confiscated by Paul IV in 1557. The first restoration works
started under Pius IV's pontificate, and the villa was destined to be
residence of illustrious guests. New restoration works were carried
out in the second half of the 18th-century by Clement XIV and Pius VI.
Villa Giulia officially became a museum in 1889. After 1910, following
some changes of the urban planning of the area, two new wings of the
museum were built, and later on they were connected to the hemicycle
of the villa by a hanging gallery.
Today, Villa Giulia is the most representative Etruscan museum in Italy.
The pieces on display are arranged according to a topographic criterion
and grouped by their place of origin, except for some collections which
are exhibited according to a typological viewpoint. The Hall of Venus
is devoted to the material from Pyrgi including remarkable evidences
from the great Etruscan sanctuary of Leucotea-Ilizia; among the numerous
sculptures from the precious polychrome terracotta decoration covering
the wooden structure of the two temples of the sanctuary, remarkable
are the famed pediment high relief portraying the Greek legend of the
Seven against Thebes, and the late 6th-century B.C. gold leaves with
Etruscan and Phoenician inscriptions. New exhibition rooms displaying
ceramics, bronzes and gold-works from the Castellani Collection as well
as a section devoted to the Villa of pope Julius III and the history
of the museum are being arranged.
Opening: Tues. to Sun. 8.30-19.30
(ticket office closed at 18.30) - closed Mon
The Palatine Museum
via di San Gregorio
Re-opened to the public after 13 years, this museum displays detached
frescos and finds which span the history of Rome from her origin to
the Imperial age. On the first floor: Iron age and Republican period
finds. On the second floor: detached frescos and inlaid works coming
from the Domus Transitoria, the Imperial age statues of Augustus, Adrian
and Anthony, a Polycletus' lance-bearer fragments and the superb clay
architectural elements once belonging to Augustan buildings.
Opening: Daily 9-18
National Museum of Castel Sant'Angelo
lungotevere Castello, 50
Originally intended as a mausoleum by the Emperor Hadrian (117-138
AD), Castel Sant'Angelo became, in later centuries, the bastion of the
Papal State, both literally and metaphorically. It is now possible to
visit the interior of the fortress, which also used to be a sadly renowned
prison. It is possible to visit the various rooms decorated with 16th-century
frescos (the Apollo Hall, the Paul's Hall, the Perseus Hall, the Cupid
and Psyche Hall), the prison, the collection of antique weapons, and
the picture gallery (works by Carlo Crivelli, Luca Signorelli, Bartolomeo
Montagna)
Opening: daily 9.00-20.00
(ticket office closed at 19.00)- closed Mon.