Ferrara, Palazzo Costabili or Palazzo di Ludovico il Moro (today it is the seat of the National Archaeological of Spina), Aula Costabiliana o Hall of the Treasure, vault, XVI century frescoes by Benvenuto Tisi, known as il Garofalo: detail of one of the lunettes that represent the myth of Eros and Anteros, a literary work by the humanist Celio Calcagnini, a close friend of Costabili, who chose his work to inspire Garofalo and his collaborators.
Ferrara, Palazzo Costabili or Palazzo di Ludovico il Moro (today it is the seat of the National Archaeological of Spina), Aula Costabiliana o Hall of the Treasure, vault, XVI century frescoes by Benvenuto Tisi, known as il Garofalo: detail of one of the lunettes that represent the myth of Eros and Anteros, a literary work by the humanist Celio Calcagnini, a close friend of Costabili, who chose his work to inspire Garofalo and his collaborators.