He spent his formative years between his native Venice, working as an apprenticed architect and scenographer, and Rome, learning his first technical rudiments of etchings as a topographical engraver. The whimsical nature of the Carceri has been explained through Piranesi's education as a stage designer. In these paradoxical and irrational spatial constructions, gothic arches are supported by piers disposed in the same plane, staircases incongruently intersect other architectural elements, focal points multiply while repeated forms increase the ambiguity of the space. The impossible spaces produced by the fantasy of the artist deliberately defy any rule of architecture. The inventiveness of the architecture is the result of Piranesi's own interpretation of his imaginary dreamlike prison. Yet the vastness of the space represented has little to do with the confined and claustrophobic chambers of an eighteenth-century prison. These elements gave the composition certain elements of prison imagery. He created this cluttered composition, enriching it with a series of instruments of torture, 'many of them infused with a sense of decay through endless use.' In 1761, Piranesi perfected this series of prints after 15 years during which he substantially reworked the plates and added two more. Not conceived for strict commercial purposes - as suggested by the absence of any indication of the authorship on the frontispiece and on most of the plate - the etchings provided an outlet for Piranesi's fervent imagination. First appearing around 1745, the Carceri (the Prisons) was regarded as a private and highly experimental work.
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