Fontana del Moro in Piazza Navona
Davide VadalaDavide Vadala|Guest Contributor|SIGHTSEEING, ROME Updated : Dec 21, 2016, 04.30 PM IST
Davide Vadala
Davide has been a long term traveller for the last seven years, sharing his stories and impressive photos on NomadTravellers.com and travelling sustainably and very low cost. He knows every corner of Europe, in particular Italy and Romania, he loves Nepali Himalaya and he has extensive experience in South East Asia, where he calls Indonesia his second home. He is specialized in sightseeing guides and reports from his first hand experiences, with a focus on nature, arts and architecture.
On the south side, the Fountana del Moro fed by the Acqua Virgo aqueduct, is the most eye-catching of the two, and once again Gian Lorenzo Bernini is involved in its realisation.
The project of the fountain was first assigned to another famous Renaissance artist, Giacomo della Porta, in 1575 by Pope Gregory XIII.
The project of Della Porta was realised using Carrara marble and pink marbles for the mixtilinear basin, and it was decorated with four tritons, originally intended to be placed in the fountain in Piazza del Popolo, but never used.
In 1655, Pope Innocenzo X Pamphilj decided to add a central sculptural element that was commissioned to Bernini and realised after his design by its disciple Giovanni Antonio Mari.
The central character (perhaps Neptune) resembles a Moor/African/Ethiopian according to the source; that’s why the name “Fonatan del Moro”. This human-fish being, standing on a shell, is strangling a dolphin spouting the water from its mouth.
Other changes in the fountain were accomplished, including the creation of a second bigger basin and the removal of the metallic fence.
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