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Original fileThis view shows the manicured grounds of the Renaissance-era villa, featuring winding gravel paths, wide lawns, and a variety of trees including Mediterranean pines and cedars. A small circular fountain is situated in the middle ground, and a single classical column fragment stands within a cleared area to the left. The scene captures the layout of a classic Italian villa garden designed for contemplation and leisure.
The Villa Farnesina, commissioned by the banker Agostino Chigi, was a primary hub for humanist culture and Neoplatonic thought in 16th-century Rome. While the garden itself has evolved, the site is famous for Raphael's frescoes of 'The Triumph of Galatea' and the 'Loggia of Cupid and Psyche,' which translate complex classical and philosophical allegories into visual form.
Raphael
The artist responsible for the Neoplatonic fresco cycles within the villa associated with these gardens.
Agostino Chigi
The Renaissance patron who commissioned the villa as a site for humanist gathering and philosophical discourse.
Object
Oil on panel
landscape
Linked Data
AI AI-cataloged fields generated by gemini-3-flash-preview on April 1, 2026. Getty identifiers are AI-inferred and may require verification.