Casino dell'Aurora Pallavicini 2026: Rome's Most Beautiful Ceiling Fresco Opens to the Public for One Day Per Month — Guido Reni's Aurora and How to Get Inside
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
The Casino dell'Aurora (Via XXIV Maggio 43, Rome — on the ridge of the Quirinale hill, adjacent to the gardens of the Villa Pallavicini, which now form part of the Italian Presidency complex) contains the most beautiful ceiling fresco in Rome that the majority of Rome visitors have never seen: the Aurora by Guido Reni (1613-1614 — the ceiling fresco of the garden casino of Cardinal Scipione Borghese, showing the chariot of the sun god Apollo preceded by the figure of Aurora scattering flowers, surrounded by the Hours, moving from left to right across the ceiling in a composition that is simultaneously a demonstration of Baroque illusionist ceiling painting at its most lyrical and a declaration of Reni's specific grace and light that distinguishes him from the more dramatically violent Caravaggio who was his contemporary and rival in Rome). The fresco is in excellent condition — the casino has been maintained by the Pallavicini family as a private residence and art collection, which is both the reason for its perfect preservation and the reason for its radical inaccessibility.
The Casino dell'Aurora opens to the public on the first of each month from 10:00 to 12:00 — a two-hour window in which guided visits are organized by the Pallavicini administration. Admission: approximately €5. The experience: entering a private Roman aristocratic residence and standing in the specific room for which Guido Reni created one of his acknowledged masterpieces, in a state of preservation that the Vatican collections cannot match, with a group of 20-30 visitors who made the effort to arrive on the first of the month.
Casino dell'Aurora: The Fresco and How to Visit
The Guido Reni Aurora
Guido Reni (1575-1642 — the Bologna-born painter who worked in Rome from 1600 and who became the primary exponent of the Italian Baroque's more classicizing, light-saturated alternative to the Caravaggesque tenebrist tradition) painted the Casino dell'Aurora ceiling for Cardinal Scipione Borghese in 1613-1614. The composition: Aurora (the personification of dawn) rides a chariot pulled by two white horses, scattering flowers from a basket, while the Hours (the seasonal goddesses of the classical tradition) dance around the chariot. The specific Reni quality: the figure of Aurora herself — the specific grace of the figure, the light from the left, the specific pale-golden tonality that Reni developed for his mythological works — is the most immediately recognizable Reni characteristic and is here at its most complete expression.
Practical Visit Guide
Opening: first day of each month, 10:00-12:00. No advance reservation required (walk-up entry). Arrive by 9:45 to ensure entry in the first group. Via XXIV Maggio 43 is accessible from the Quirinale area (10 minutes walk from the Repubblica Metro station or from the Barberini Metro station). The visit (guided, approximately 45-60 minutes) covers the casino and the Aurora fresco; the adjacent Pallavicini collection (paintings, sculptures, and decorative arts in the casino rooms) is partially visible during the visit.
Q&A: Casino dell'Aurora
How does the Reni Aurora compare to the Guercino Aurora across the street?
The Guercino Aurora (the ceiling fresco in the Casino Ludovisi, Via Veneto area — painted in 1621-1623 for Cardinal Ludovico Ludovisi, Guercino's first major Roman commission) is the direct competitor: painted 8 years after the Reni, in a more dramatically foreshortened Baroque illusionist style, it makes the Reni look classicizing and restrained by comparison. Art historians debate which is the superior work; the Reni Aurora is the more famous and more reproduced. The Casino Ludovisi opens on specific days (check the Comune di Roma cultural programme); combining both Aurora visits requires coordination but is the most rewarding single half-day Rome experience for Italian Baroque painting.
Internal Links
- Barocco Romano: Reni, Guercino e i Contemporanei
- Roma Privata: Le Collezioni che Aprono una Volta al Mese
- Roma Nascosta: Il Primo del Mese al Casino dell'Aurora
- Fotografare gli Affreschi: Tecnica e Permessi
- Guido Reni a Roma: Il Percorso Completo
- Roma Musei: Il Circuito della Grande Arte
- Barocco vs Classicismo: Il Dibattito del Seicento