A perfect combination of spontaneity, light and architecture.
This image, which evokes the atmosphere of ‘’, appears to be a spontaneous rather than studied shot taken by John Donat in the majestic rotunda of Rome’s Pantheon. It would be difficult today to enjoy it with such a small number of visitors! The group in the foreground is clearly what captured the photographer’s attention, and at the same time the circle of light created by the oculus in the dome amplifies the curve of the wall in the background, conveying the feeling that we are indeed in a circular space – a deceptively simple combination of elements for a very atmospheric photograph.
Image: Photograph of a crowd walking under the oculus, Pantheon, Rome, Italy, taken in the 1960s; image from °ÄÃÅÍõÖÐÍõpix (number °ÄÃÅÍõÖÐÍõ59150)
Photographer: John Donat (1933-2004)
Credit: John Donat / °ÄÃÅÍõÖÐÍõ Collections
Article by Valeria Carullo, °ÄÃÅÍõÖÐÍõ
6 December 2016
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Book
Marder, T. A. and Jones, M. W. eds, 2015.
'The Pantheon: from antiquity to the present'
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
Shelved at 72.032.7(37R)P // PAN [Reference] -
Drawing
Topographical drawing of the Pantheon, Rome, 1862, by Cuthbert Brodrick (1822-1905): one sheet
Call/Ref. no. SC35/5 [located at the V&A]