
Untitled (Ruins of Roman Forum)
<p>Abandoning medical studies in his native Edinburgh, Robert MacPherson traveled to Rome in 1840 to try his hand as a landscape painter. His move coincided with a rise in tourism to Italy, in particular to the country’s classical monuments. MacPherson took up photography in 1851 to capitalize on this burgeoning tourist trade, and he soon gained success as a landscape photographer producing deluxe views for British customers. MacPherson has carefully omitted signs of the present in this image of the Forum, such as traffic, local Italians, and commercial vendors, to focus instead on a mythic past for buyers eager to own a piece of Western civilization.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1862
- Medium
- Albumen print
- Dimensions
- Image/paper: 31.5 × 40.2 cm (12 7/16 × 15 7/8 in.); Mount: 46.4 × 64.1 cm (18 5/16 × 25 1/4 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Robert Macpherson
Artist

Photography
Robert Macpherson was a British photographer and antiquarian active in mid-19th-century Rome, where he documented classical sites and Renaissance architecture with large-format paper negatives. Working primarily in albumen print, he produced systematic photographic surveys of Italian cultural patrimony that established him as a pioneering figure in archaeological photography. His archive remains a significant record of Roman monuments and artworks as they existed in the 1850s and 1860s.
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More by Robert Macpherson
Coliseum
1862 · Albumen print
The Templum Minerva Medica and the Surrounding Area
1861 · albumen print
Ruin of Temple of Minerva Medica, Rome
1860 · Albumen silver print from a wet-collodion glass negative
View of Rome from Monte Pincio
1860 · albumen print on paper, photographic support, cardboard
Palace of the Caesars on the Palatine
1860 · Albumen print
St. Peter's
1858 · albumen print from wet collodion negative
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Robert Macpherson
- Year
- 1862
- Medium
- Albumen print
- Dimensions
- Image/paper: 31.5 × 40.2 cm (12 7/16 × 15 7/8 in.); Mount: 46.4 × 64.1 cm (18 5/16 × 25 1/4 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1862-024613
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified




