Seen in today's entry is the Lower Belvedere Palace in Vienna, Austria. This entry is a complement to my earlier post which profiled the glorious architecture of the (upper) Belvedere Palace. It took over five months for this image to get posted...Unlike the previous post, which was a high dynamic range image, I worked with a single exposure here. Of the two images, which do you prefer?

From Wikipedia:
After buying the plot of land in 1697, Prince Eugene had a large park created. The Belvedere palace began as a suburban entertainment villa: in 1714 work began to erect what is now called the Lower Belvedere, not as a palace but as a garden villa, with an orangerie and paintings gallery, with suitable living quarters. The architect was Johann Lukas von Hildebrandt, one of the most important architects of the Austrian Baroque, who produced in the complex of buildings his masterwork. He was assisted by the Venetian sculptor Giovanni Stanetti, who had been brought to Vienna by Prince Eugene, with his atelier of assistants; now he also provided properly Italianate sculptural details, such as the figures along the balustrade and garden sculptures. The Lower Belvedere was finished in 1716. The ceiling of its central Marmorsaal ('Marble Hall'), painted by Martino Altomonte, celebrates Prince Eugene as a new Apollo, leader of the Muses. The room also contains an Apotheosis of Prince Eugene sculpted by Balthasar Permoser.

Note: see my entire Austria gallery here.

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