The Water Porter
Davide VadalaDavide Vadala|Guest Contributor|SIGHTSEEING, ROME Updated : Dec 21, 2016, 04.51 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.
Once you reach the correct road, it might still be difficult to spot it, since it’s not a monumental composition but rather a small statue embedded below the windowsill.
If you think it’s quite a weird location, you are actually right and should know that it originally stood on the main facade of the same building in Via del Corso, butwas moved to its current location only in 1874.
The composition is very simple: a water porter is portrayed wearing a hat and traditional clothes, and he stands with its barrel from where the water is spouted inside a small elevated water basin.
The water porter fountain is a part of a cycle of “talking statues”, a total of six pieces that were used as some kind of political bulletin boards for sticking satirical verses by the people in the 16th century.
All other talking statues date back m to the ancient Roman times, except this one sculpted probably around 1580 by Jacopo del Conte. It depicts a scene of real life before the completion of water works, when water porters were filling up their barrels in the river Tiberim for sale in the city.
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