---
product_id: 8075706
title: "Bernini: His Life and His Rome"
price: "€ 46.93"
currency: EUR
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.hr/products/8075706-bernini-his-life-and-his-rome
store_origin: HR
region: Croatia
---

# Bernini: His Life and His Rome

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## Description

A dazzling, accessible biography of one of the great geniuses of the Renaissance: sculptor, architect, and painter Bernini Sculptor, architect, painter, playwright, and scenographer, Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598–1680) was the last of the great universal artistic geniuses of early modern Italy, placed by both contemporaries and posterity in the same exalted company as Leonardo, Raphael, and Michelangelo. And his artistic vision remains palpably present today, through the countless statues, fountains, and buildings that transformed Rome into the Baroque theater that continues to enthrall tourists today. It is perhaps not surprising that this artist who defined the Baroque should have a personal life that itself was, well, baroque. As Franco Mormando’s dazzling biography reveals, Bernini was a man driven by many passions, possessed of an explosive temper and a hearty sex drive, and he lived a life as dramatic as any of his creations. Drawing on archival sources, letters, diaries, and—with a suitable skepticism—a hagiographic account written by Bernini’s son (who portrays his father as a paragon of virtue and piety), Mormando leads us through Bernini’s many feuds and love affairs, scandals and sins. He sets Bernini’s raucous life against a vivid backdrop of Baroque Rome, bustling and wealthy, and peopled by churchmen and bureaucrats, popes and politicians, schemes and secrets. The result is a seductively readable biography, stuffed with stories and teeming with life—as wild and unforgettable as Bernini’s art. No one who has been bewitched by the Baroque should miss it.

Review: Great read for this amateur art lover - About me: I'm not an artist or an art historian or anything fancy like that: I'm just an avid traveler and Rome is one of my favorite places in the world. OK, my MOST favorite place in the world. Trip after trip, I've noticed certain statues or works of art more than others... certain ones just struck me more or made me stare at them a little bit longer. Or when I get home i realize that I have more pictures of certain things than others. A few trips ago I realized that every sculpture I was drawn to had 1 artist in common: Bernini. And people would say, "Oh, that's a Bernini" -- and the name sounded familiar but I didn't know anything about him. On last year's trip to Italy I made a point of seeking out these Berninis and found myself even more interested in them, so when I returned home I started poking around for a biography. Some things looked too scholarly and highbrow, but the descriptions of this particular book made it sound like it was accessible to the regular person who just wanted to know a little something more: and that was me. I just finished the book and I'm so happy I read it. I came at this from the standpoint of "I love this man's art so much, and it's so brilliant, that I just want to know more about the person and his life and the events that shaped him." Basically, I wanted to learn where the genius came from. This book doesn't read like a DaVinci Code: the info itself is a little bit dry, but plugged into a narrative that is basically the story arc of Bernini's life, it has a continuity to it that makes it easy to read (vs being textbook-like). It's a biography and is constructed from many different sources. I imagine if you were well-educated in art or about Bernini in particular, or about Baroque art in Italy, you'd still find fantastic information in here. But for this novice, I was thrilled that it wasn't over my head: I learned something. And I feel like on my next trip to Rome, these beautiful works of art will have more context for me than they have in the past. And it made me appreciate that this author had such a passion for the subject that he went to the trouble of gathering all of this data and putting it into a book. It's a great read whether you're an art afficianado or, like me, someone who just wants to know more about the life and work of an artist whose work they admire.
Review: Brilliant biography! - It's surprising that nobody has made a movie or written a novel about the life of Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598-1680), the greatest artist of the Roman Baroque, but perhaps this enthralling book will inspire someone to try. Bernini's long life had just about every dramatic ingredient imaginable. His blazing artistic genius enabled him to create some of the most memorable monuments of Rome: virtuoso marble statues of saints and mythological figures, the Fountain of the Four Rivers in Piazza Navona, the Baldachino under the dome of St. Peter's, and the altar of the Chair of Peter at the far end of that enormous church, to name only the most famous. But there's a lot more to Bernini's life than just his art. He was a controlling and domineering man shrewd enough to be charming and diplomatic in the presence of his social superiors. He was hot-tempered and highly-sexed, and his explosive romantic life alone--which included paying a thug to make a knife attack on his mistress, whom he discovered was having an affair with his brother--would lend itself to a steamy novel or an R-rated film. And it doesn't hurt that Bernini was also extremely handsome. Most books about Bernini concentrate on his art and pay little attention to the man behind those works, failing to question the pious platitudes, omissions and distortions offered by the artist's earliest biographer: his son Domenico. Not this book! Bernini the man-in-full emerges emerges from Mormando's pages as in no other biography of the artist. Although the author is a scholar who displays an impressive command of original sources, there's not a pedantic sentence to be found. This is a highly readable book for anyone interested in Bernini and, in a wider sense, in Baroque Rome. As the title promises, the author also presents an unforgettable portrait of that seething city, contrasting its glorious monuments, haughty aristocrats and art-loving, corrupt cardinals with the squalor and desperate poverty of the majority of its inhabitants. Learning how most Romans lived during the 1600s, it's not difficult to understand why the popes and prelates celebrated today for commissioning Bernini's grandest works were so unpopular in their own times. They spent the equivalent of billions of dollars on monuments to triumphant Catholicism (and made Bernini a multi-millionaire) while all around them the poverty-stricken Roman populace starved. A case in point is Cardinal Scipione Borghese, the obese, over-privileged nephew of Pope Paul V. He's best known for building the Villa Borghese --now Rome's most elegant museum--and filling it with an exquisite art collection that includes some of Bernini's finest sculptures. Mormando reveals, however, that Scipione was also an art thief who regularly stole what he couldn't buy, and a voracious pedophile who thought nothing of having his servants murder a boy who had refused his advances. Although this book has only black and white plates, there are plenty of books that illustrate Bernini's art in gorgeous color. No other book, however, gives such a vivid, many-faceted portrait of the artist himself, a man whose relentless, conniving ambition, frightening temper and at times out-of-control sexual impulses co-existed with deep devotion to his family and, above all, with incomparable genius as an artist. Int the end, Bernini's greatest love was his art.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #425,675 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #277 in Biographies of Artists, Architects & Photographers (Books) #551 in Art Movements (Books) #1,775 in Art History (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 119 Reviews |

## Images

![Bernini: His Life and His Rome - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61xERKETguL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Great read for this amateur art lover
*by I***. on March 29, 2012*

About me: I'm not an artist or an art historian or anything fancy like that: I'm just an avid traveler and Rome is one of my favorite places in the world. OK, my MOST favorite place in the world. Trip after trip, I've noticed certain statues or works of art more than others... certain ones just struck me more or made me stare at them a little bit longer. Or when I get home i realize that I have more pictures of certain things than others. A few trips ago I realized that every sculpture I was drawn to had 1 artist in common: Bernini. And people would say, "Oh, that's a Bernini" -- and the name sounded familiar but I didn't know anything about him. On last year's trip to Italy I made a point of seeking out these Berninis and found myself even more interested in them, so when I returned home I started poking around for a biography. Some things looked too scholarly and highbrow, but the descriptions of this particular book made it sound like it was accessible to the regular person who just wanted to know a little something more: and that was me. I just finished the book and I'm so happy I read it. I came at this from the standpoint of "I love this man's art so much, and it's so brilliant, that I just want to know more about the person and his life and the events that shaped him." Basically, I wanted to learn where the genius came from. This book doesn't read like a DaVinci Code: the info itself is a little bit dry, but plugged into a narrative that is basically the story arc of Bernini's life, it has a continuity to it that makes it easy to read (vs being textbook-like). It's a biography and is constructed from many different sources. I imagine if you were well-educated in art or about Bernini in particular, or about Baroque art in Italy, you'd still find fantastic information in here. But for this novice, I was thrilled that it wasn't over my head: I learned something. And I feel like on my next trip to Rome, these beautiful works of art will have more context for me than they have in the past. And it made me appreciate that this author had such a passion for the subject that he went to the trouble of gathering all of this data and putting it into a book. It's a great read whether you're an art afficianado or, like me, someone who just wants to know more about the life and work of an artist whose work they admire.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Brilliant biography!
*by A***R on June 20, 2013*

It's surprising that nobody has made a movie or written a novel about the life of Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598-1680), the greatest artist of the Roman Baroque, but perhaps this enthralling book will inspire someone to try. Bernini's long life had just about every dramatic ingredient imaginable. His blazing artistic genius enabled him to create some of the most memorable monuments of Rome: virtuoso marble statues of saints and mythological figures, the Fountain of the Four Rivers in Piazza Navona, the Baldachino under the dome of St. Peter's, and the altar of the Chair of Peter at the far end of that enormous church, to name only the most famous. But there's a lot more to Bernini's life than just his art. He was a controlling and domineering man shrewd enough to be charming and diplomatic in the presence of his social superiors. He was hot-tempered and highly-sexed, and his explosive romantic life alone--which included paying a thug to make a knife attack on his mistress, whom he discovered was having an affair with his brother--would lend itself to a steamy novel or an R-rated film. And it doesn't hurt that Bernini was also extremely handsome. Most books about Bernini concentrate on his art and pay little attention to the man behind those works, failing to question the pious platitudes, omissions and distortions offered by the artist's earliest biographer: his son Domenico. Not this book! Bernini the man-in-full emerges emerges from Mormando's pages as in no other biography of the artist. Although the author is a scholar who displays an impressive command of original sources, there's not a pedantic sentence to be found. This is a highly readable book for anyone interested in Bernini and, in a wider sense, in Baroque Rome. As the title promises, the author also presents an unforgettable portrait of that seething city, contrasting its glorious monuments, haughty aristocrats and art-loving, corrupt cardinals with the squalor and desperate poverty of the majority of its inhabitants. Learning how most Romans lived during the 1600s, it's not difficult to understand why the popes and prelates celebrated today for commissioning Bernini's grandest works were so unpopular in their own times. They spent the equivalent of billions of dollars on monuments to triumphant Catholicism (and made Bernini a multi-millionaire) while all around them the poverty-stricken Roman populace starved. A case in point is Cardinal Scipione Borghese, the obese, over-privileged nephew of Pope Paul V. He's best known for building the Villa Borghese --now Rome's most elegant museum--and filling it with an exquisite art collection that includes some of Bernini's finest sculptures. Mormando reveals, however, that Scipione was also an art thief who regularly stole what he couldn't buy, and a voracious pedophile who thought nothing of having his servants murder a boy who had refused his advances. Although this book has only black and white plates, there are plenty of books that illustrate Bernini's art in gorgeous color. No other book, however, gives such a vivid, many-faceted portrait of the artist himself, a man whose relentless, conniving ambition, frightening temper and at times out-of-control sexual impulses co-existed with deep devotion to his family and, above all, with incomparable genius as an artist. Int the end, Bernini's greatest love was his art.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Extraordinary!
*by D***B on August 27, 2023*

One of the best art history books I have ever read. Thoroughly researched and beautifully written. Fun to read. Highly engaging. Packed with a ton of information and filled with such personality by the author. I absolutely loved this book!

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*Last updated: 2026-05-14*