Rome Escorts
Escorts in Rome

- Angelina
- Rome
Escorts available to travel to Rome
Varying notice is required to book the following escorts for Rome.

- Angelique
- Brussels

- Roxanne
- Brussels

- Eve
- Brussels

- Kenza
- Brussels

- Sharon
- Milan

- Natalie
- Vienna

- Sharlotte
- Rome

- Grace
- Vienna

- Jane
- London

- Jessica
- London

- Johanna
- Vienna

- Jess
- Brussels

- Martina
- Barcelona

- Ane
- London

- Heidi
- London

- Lina
- London

- Isabelle
- London

- Angel
- Madrid

- Christie
- Dubai

- Claire
- Vienna

- Amy
- Brussels

- Emily
- London

- Valentina
- Amsterdam

- Jill
- Vienna

- Carmen
- London

- Alexandra
- Barcelona

- Pearl
- Dubai

- Katharine
- Toronto
Rome Art Galleries
- Rome is less known for its art galleries than other Italian cities such as Florence, but it still has many wonderful homes to artisitc masterpieces. One is the Museum Galleria Borghese, housed in the summer house of the Villa Borghese. The collection is made up of paintings and sculptures gathered by Cardinal Scipione Borghese, including great works by those such as Raphael, Caravaggio, and Bernini’s Apollo and Daphne and Rape of Persephone. It is one of the world’s most luxuriant private collections, as well as being one of the best.
For those who prefer more modern art, head to Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Moderna (The Modern National Gallery) on Viale delle Belle Arti, one of the most significant collections of 19th and 20th century work in Italy. There are pieces from movements such as neo-classicism, Tuscan Macchiaoli impressionism, and romanticism, by both Italian and other European artists, such as Goya, Van Gough, Rodin and Monet.
Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Antica (The National Gallery of Antique Art) offers something a little different. The gallery is divided between two sites, Palazzo Corsini, on Via della Lungara, and Palazzo Barberini, on Via Quattro Fontane. The gallery in Palazzo Barberini offers mainly Italian paintings from the thirteenth to sixteenth centuries, by those such as infamous artists Fra Angelico and Filippo Lippi, whilst the one in Palazzo Corsini exhibits a smaller collection made up of 17th and 18th century regional paintings, and others by more renowned artists, such as Rubens and Caravaggio. A major highlight of the Barberini gallery is the Gran Salone (Grand Hall) ceiling, which is an astounding masterpiece by Pietro da Cortona.
The Galleria Spada, housed in the stunning 16th century Palazzo Spada in Piazza Capo di Ferro, is home to the Spada family collection, made up of paintings predominantly from the 17th and 18th centuries. The pieces include work from the Renaissance and Baroque periods, and pieces by Jan Brueghel the Elder and Rubens There are also some unusual sculptures from the 6th and 7th centuries, including a gigantic one of Pompey in the General Council Chamber of the Palazzo.
One of the most esteemed galleries in Rome is that of Galleria dell'Accademia di San Luca in Via dell'Accademia di S. Luca. It began life as an art academy in 1478, with the dictate that every member had to donate a piece to the academy’s collection. Through these offerings, and further bequests, the gallery has a very varied mix of pieces by classical artists such as Raphael, van Dyck, and Titian.
The Galleria Doria Pamphilj, in Piazza del Collegio Romano, houses the art collection of one of Rome’s foremost aristocratic families, and is replete with acclaimed pieces by giants such as Raphael and Velázquez. The latter’s famous painting of the Pamhilj pope, famous for its psychological intringue, is on display here, as well as many other renowned paintings such as Caravaggio’s Mary Magdalene, and Titian’s Salome with the Head of John the Baptist.