The  Park of the Monsters (Parco dei Mostri in Italian-language), also named  Garden of Bomarzo, is a Renaissance monumental complex located in  Bomarzo, in the province of Viterbo, in northern Lazio, Italy. The  gardens were created during the 16th century. They are composed of a  wooded park, located at the bottom of a valley where the castle of  Orsini was erected, and populated by sculptures and small buildings  divided among of the natural vegetation. The park’s name stems from the  many larger-than-life sculptures, some sculpted in the bedrock, which  populate this predominantly barren landscape. It is the work of Pier  Francesco Orsini, called Vicino (1528–1588), a condottiero and patron of  the arts, greatly devoted to his wife Giulia Farnese; when she died, he  created the gardens.
The design was attributed to Pirro Ligorio. During the nineteenth  century and deep into the twentieth the garden became overgrown and  neglected, but in the 1970s a program of restoration was implemented by  the Bettini family, and today the garden, which remains private  property, is a major tourist attraction.
The park of Bomarzo was intended not to please, but to astonish, and  like many Mannerist works of art, its symbolism is arcane : examples are  a large sculpture of one of Hannibal’s war elephants, which mangles a  Roman legionary, or the statue of Ceres lounging on the bare ground,  with a vase of verdure perched on her head. The many monstrous statues  appear to be unconnected to any rational plan and appear to have been  strewn almost randomly about the area, sol per sfogare il Core (“just to  set the heart free”) as one inscription in the obelisks says.




















