Donato d'Agnolo Bramante|Giovanni Giacomo De Rossi

A street with buildings, colonnades and an arch

1475–1510
Engraving; third state of three
26.3 × 37.8 cm (10.4 × 14.9 in)

SEE IT IN PERSON

Not currently on view

In the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York · as of July 2026

View at metmuseum.orgPlan a visit ↗

Discussion

Be the first to share your thoughts.

Sign in to join the discussion.

Community guidelines

More like this

A street with buildings and arcadesDonato d'Agnolo Bramante|Giovanni Giacomo De Rossi|AnonymousA street with various buildings, colonnades and an archDonato d'Agnolo Bramante — A street with various buildings, View of the Capitoline Hill during Michelangelo's restoration, the equestrian monument of Marcus Aurelius in the centre from the 'Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae:'Anonymous|Nicolas Beatrizet — View of the Capitoline Hill duPorta Antonae, from a Series of Prints depicting (reconstructed) Buildings from Roman AntiquityMonogrammist G.A. & the Caltrop — Porta Antonae, from a SeriPalatium Maius Ro, from a Series of 24 Depicting (Reconstructed) Buildings from Roman AntiquityMonogrammist G.A. & the Caltrop|Anonymous, Italian, 16th cenCourt Yards (Sketch for Stage Scene ?)Anonymous, Italian, 16th century — Court Yards (Sketch for SPlate from "Scenographiae..."Johannes van Doetecum I|Hans Vredeman de Vries|Hieronymus CoSpeculum Romanae Magnificentiae: Arch of ConstantineAntonio Lafreri|Anonymous|Claudio Duchetti — Speculum RomanaPalatium Valerianu[m], from a series of prints depicting (reconstructed) Buildings from Roman AntiquityMonogrammist G.A. & the Caltrop — Palatium Valerianu[m], froProject for a Public Building on a SquareAnonymous, Italian, 16th century — Project for a Public BuilThe Arch of Titus Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae)Anonymous|Antonio Salamanca — The Arch of Titus Speculum RomSpeculum Romanae Magnificentiae: Farnese Palace InteriorAnonymous|Claudio Duchetti — Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae