Capriccio with the Campidoglio is a c. 1742 oil-on-canvas painting by the Italian artist Bernardo Bellotto.
The work is a capriccio, which mixes what really exists (here, the Capitol of Rome, its staircase and the church of Aracoeli), with fantastic places (the ruins in the foreground).
The ruins in the foreground serve as the proscenium, offering a view of the Capitol from the bottom of the cordonata capitolina, the staircase designed by Michelangelo, and also including the Church of Santa Maria in Aracoeli.
By depicting these buildings, so loved by foreigners undertaking the Grand Tour in Italy, more than reproducing reality, Bellotto seeks to represent an almost melancholy feeling, to remind the observer of past ancient grandeur.
The canvas belongs to the beginning of the artist's production, constituting a testimony to his Roman period.