In Ancient Marbles in Naples in the Eighteenth Century Eloisa Dodero aims at documenting the history of numerous private collections formed in Naples during the 18th century, with particular concern for the âNeapolitan marblesâ and the circumstances of their dispersal. Research has thus made it possible to formulate a synthesis of the collecting dynamics of Naples in the 18th century, to define the interest of the great European collectors, especially British, in the antiquities of the city and its territory and to draw up a catalogue which for the first time brings together the nucleus of sculptures reported in the Neapolitan collections or coming from irregular excavations, most of which shared the destiny of dispersal, in some cases here traced in definitive fashion.
Eloisa Dodero, Ph.D. (2009), Federico II University - Naples, is curator archaeologist at the Capitoline Museums, Rome. She is involved in the publication of the Paper Museum of Cassiano dal Pozzo (Brepols) and in a new, revised edition of Taste and the Antique. The Lure of Classical Sculpture (Brepols).
List of Figures List of Abbreviations
Introduction
1 The Collections of Antiquities in Naples in the 18th Century: a Changing Scenario
2 Sources for a Knowledge of the Neapolitan Collections of Antiquities in the 18th Century
â1âThe Descrizioni of Naples and the Travel Literature in the 17th and 18th Century
â2âErudite Works, Epigraphic Sylloges and Corpora
â3âThe Correspondence of Antiquarians
â4âCatalogues of Collections
â5âPrivate Archives, Inventories and Auction Catalogues
â6âThe Evidence Offered by the Paintings
â7âThe Townley Archive, the Townley Drawings and the Topham Collection of Drawings
3 Collections of Antiquities in Naples between the End of the 17th and the Closing Years of the 18th Century
âForeword
â1âSculptures as Furniture: Ancient Marbles in Old Palaces and Stately Homes
â2âThe Leading Collectors
â3âSmall Collections of Vases, Inscriptions, Coins, Gems
â4âWunderkammern in Naples
â5âThe Collections of the Religious Orders
â6âThe Collections of the Foreigners
4 The Channels of Dispersal of the Neapolitan Marbles from the Viceregal Period to the End of the 18th Century
â1âThe Spanish Viceroyalty and the Austrian Viceroyalty
â2âThe Age of the Bourbons
â3âMarbles of Neapolitan Origin in 18th-Century British Collections
Conclusions
Catalogue â Part 1: Ancient Marbles in 18th-Century Neapolitan Collection
Sculptures as Furniture: Ancient Marbles in Old Palaces and Stately Homes
âPalazzo Carafa di Colubrano (cat. no. 1â43)
âVilla Mazza (cat. no. 44â50)
âPalazzo Firrao (cat. no. 51â52)
âPalazzo Cellamare (cat. no. 53â64)
âThe Gaetani dâAragona, Dukes of Laurenzano (cat. no. 65â71)
The Leading Collectors
âGiuseppe Valletta (cat. no. 72â122)
âFelice Maria Mastrilli (cat. no. 123â133)
âGiovanni Battista Carafa Duke di Noja (cat. no. 134â138)
Small Collections of Vases, Inscriptions, Coins, Gems
âFerdinando Galiani (cat. no. 139â140)
Wunderkammern in Naples
âFrancesco Antonio Picchiatti (cat. no. 141â145)
The Collections of the Foreigners
âSir William Hamilton (cat. no. 146â200)
âVinzenz von Rainer zu Harbach (cat. no. 201â202)
Catalogue â Part 2: Sculptures Found in Naples and Its Surroundings Between the 17th and the 18th Century
Pimentelâs Excavations at Cuma (cat. no. 203â217)
Hadrawaâs Excavations in Capri (cat. no. 234â240)
Neapolitan Marbles in British Collections
âWilton House
âOther Collections Assembled in the First Half of the 18th Century (cat. no. 241)
âCharles Townley Collection (cat. no. 242â252)
âLyde Browne Collection (cat. no. 251â253)
âHenry Blundell Collection (cat. no. 254â255)
âThomas Hope Collection (cat. no. 256)
Archival Sources Bibliography Index of Sculptures by Location General Index
All interested in the history of collecting, antiquarianism and the reception of the Antique during the 18th century.