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Thursday, April 23, 2026 |
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| The Ara Pacis comes to life in a new immersive nighttime experience in Rome |
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L'Ara si rivela @ Sovrintendenza capitolina ai beni culturali.
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ROME.- Rome is offering visitors a striking new way to experience one of its most iconic ancient monuments. As of March 27, 2026, the Museum of the Ara Pacis has launched The altar reveals itself, an immersive multimedia experience that transforms the celebrated altar into a dynamic journey through history, combining videomapping, sound, and storytelling. Rather than presenting the Ara Pacis as a static relic, the project invites visitors to move through a carefully designed route around and inside the monument while listening to a narrative enriched by the voices of figures from different eras, including Renaissance collectors, archaeologists, and restorers who played a role in its rediscovery. As the story unfolds, light projections animate the marble reliefs, tracing their contours and revealing details that are often difficult to perceive, giving the impression that the monument itself is coming back to life.
At the core of the experience is a sophisticated technological system using eight 4K laser projectors synchronized with sound and lighting to create a seamless visual environment. Beyond its visual impact, the project also brings scholarly research to the forefront, particularly through the reintroduction of color. Although the Ara Pacis appears today as white marble, studies based on laboratory analysis and comparisons with Roman painting suggest it was once vividly colored. Through digital projections, visitors can now glimpse a scientifically informed reconstruction of its original appearance. The experience unfolds in stages, beginning with the monuments origins under Augustus and its connection to Romes founding myths, continuing with the detailed procession scenes of priests and imperial figures carved along its sides, and culminating in the richly symbolic vegetal frieze filled with plants and animals representing abundance and renewal. The final portion of the visit traces the monuments later history, from its burial and centuries of obscurity to its rediscovery during the Renaissance and eventual reconstruction in modern times.
City officials have framed the initiative as part of a broader effort to make Romes cultural heritage more accessible and engaging through innovative technologies. Mayor Roberto Gualtieri described it as a new way to understand one of the citys most important monuments, while Cultural Councillor Massimiliano Smeriglio emphasized its ability to connect past and present in a way that resonates with contemporary audiences. The experience takes place in the evening, from Friday through Sunday, with small guided groups and a duration of approximately 45 minutes, creating a more intimate and atmospheric setting than traditional museum visits. Tickets are available online and at select locations across the city, with advance booking recommended due to limited capacity. By blending historical research with immersive design, The altar reveals itself offers visitors not just a deeper understanding of the Ara Pacis, but a chance to experience it as a living narrativeone that continues to evolve more than two thousand years after it was first conceived.
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