The Palazzo Bolognetti-Torlonia, today demolished, was a palace located in Piazza Venezia, Rome, Italy.
Among guests to the palace in those days were the King of Bavaria, Russia aristocrats, and the rulers of Baden.
The building was demolished in 1903, to improve the vista of the Monument to Vittorio Emanuele II from Via del Corso.
Another wing of the palace was called Gallery dell' Ercole, by Canova, taking its name from the group of statues of the “Lica Heracles” by Antonio Canova, today at the Galleria Nazionale di Arte Moderna also in Rome.
It was a mix of museum and reception room with paints and decoration in plaster, mirrors, furniture, silver elements, copies of ancient Greek and Roman sculptures.