‘This book is an absolute masterwork, impeccably and exhaustively researched, the material interpreted with wide and deep expertise filtered through the inspired genius of both the author and his protagonists, and the whole account beautifully written and easy to follow. It is a perfect match of scholar and subject.’
Ingrid Rowland - University of Notre Dame
‘This volume is one of the single most important works in the field of Renaissance Studies to come along in some time. The book promises to be the locus classicus for all future studies of Chigi’s villa, the art that adorns it, and the world in which it was made.’
Paul Barolsky - University of Virginia
'… to recreate a largely vanished masterpiece of Renaissance architecture, painting and stucco in such detail, with diligent research fleshed out here and there by intelligent speculation and acute insight, is an achievement in itself. The Villa Farnesina is … a model of scholarly practice, lucidly written.’
Keith Miller
Source: The Times Literary Supplement
‘James Grantham Turner’s magisterial study The Villa Farnesina: Palace of Venus in Renaissance Rome captures the project’s intimate link with fantasy from the very moment of its conception…. With its lavish color illustrations, The Villa Farnesina is a thing of beauty appropriate to its subject and Turner’s passion for it.’
Ingrid Rowland
Source: New York Review of Books
‘… an important intervention in the study of a building that is so central to understanding Rome in the early sixteenth century. A useful tool for scholars and students alike, this book will not only help us better understand the Farnesina as a collective whole. Rather, it will give us a fuller understanding of where patrons like Chigi, architects like Peruzzi, and artists like Raphael fit into the intellectual, cultural, and artistic milieux of sixteenth-century Rome thanks to Turner’s systematic dive into one of the treasures of the Roman Renaissance.’
Robert Clines
Source: Renaissance and Reformation / Renaissance et Réforme