Like many museums in Europe, most of Rome’s most famous museums don’t allow photography. (Or, if they do, I’m sorry to say I was unable to take pictures because I was in class while visiting them!) As a result, most of the images in this installment of Art in Real Life are of famous Italian places, rather than paintings–which, to be honest, I sometimes find more immediately exciting than canvases on a wall in a museum. These structures are almost all still exactly where they were hundreds of years ago when they were first built, and their size and age is mesmerizing. Rome is one of the best places in the world to be wonderfully overwhelmed by how old everything is, to wander and lose yourself on the same cobblestones Renaissance greats did. As always, nothing can top actually being there, but hopefully these tourist-y glimpses into Rome will help you feel more like you’re in the city than an art history class’ slides or PowerPoints do.
Click on any of the pictures below to open the gallery; click next (or type “n” on your keyboard) to view the next photo.























