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Italy was the centre from which Neoclassicism emanated, in the sense that Neoclassicism would be unimaginable without Rome. The remains of antiquity on Italian soil, many of which were by the 18th century romantically overgrown and half buried, inspired all artists and architects. Yet, Italian architects were followers rather than initiators of international Neoclassicism. One of the most important formative influences on the movement was Piranesi, whose etchings of Roman ruins transformed those antique fragments into sublime romantic compositions. Piranesi was in the forefront of Roman activity, and through his acquaintance with the foreign architects and patrons who visited the ...(100 of 75935 words)