Villa Arconati, Bollate

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TheVilla Arconati,also known as theCastellazzo Degli Arconati,is a rural palace and gardens, located in the district of Castellazo of the town ofBollate,northwest ofMilan,Italy. Built-in a grandBaroquestyle over the 17th and 18th centuries, it now functions as a museum and host for events and meetings.

Facade

History

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Galliari fresco ofChariot of Apollo
Roman statuePompey the Great

ACastellazzoor castle was acquired in 1610 by Galeazzo Arconati, cousin of CardinalFederico Borromeo.Galeazzo was a patron of the arts and served as the rector of theFabbrica delDuomo of Milan.Under Galeazzo's ownership, the castle-palace on the site was reconstructed and refurbished. It was also Galeazzo who, during the year 1621 brought to the structure his collection of ancient Roman sculpture,[1]including a standing statue said to bePompey the Great,[2]but also the remaining fragments of theRenaissancestyleFunereal Monument ofGaston of Foix, Duke of Nemours(died 1512) byAgostino Busi.[3]Galeazzo was also at the one-time owner of theCodex Atlanticusof Leonardo da Vinci.

The gardens were restructured in 1621. Construction on the site continued after 1648 under grandson's leadership, the Count Luigi Maria Arconati, and in 1671 under his great-grandson Giuseppe Maria Arconati. In 1718, Giuseppe Antonio Arconati, grandson of Giuseppe Maria, and remembered also for his patronage ofCarlo Goldoni,inherits the palace. In 1742, the architectGiovanni Ruggeriwas employed in embellishments and expansions. TheGalliaribrothers: Bernardino, Fabrizio, and Giovanni Antonio, were employed in the fresco decoration of the interior of the Villa.

After 1772, the palace passed on to the Busca family, who commissioned further works, including the trompe l'oeil frescoes in the entrance stairwell, attributed toGiocondo Albertolli.During the 20th century, the villa was inherited by the Marchesa Beatrice Crivelli. Many of the removable items inside the villa were auctioned in 1989. The società Palladium and others have recently purchased the Villa and since 2011 hosts the Fondazione Augusto Rancilio, which seeks to maintain and restore the site, and foster its use. The Villa is also now part of a network of Ville Gentilizie Lombarde, a project of theRegion of Lombardy,supported by theFondazione Cariplo.[4][5]The Ville Gentilizie Lombarde sponsors a project integrated project both in terms of the strategies of recovery and management of this heritage, and its use by the public through guided visits, educational programs, and events.[6]

The gardens, whose 18th-century layout was documented by the engraverMarc'Antonio dal Re,are also under restoration.

References

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  1. ^"History".villaarconati.it.Retrieved2015-12-03.
  2. ^[The Traveller's Guide Of Milan], by Marcello Mazzoni (1838), page 158.
  3. ^Archivio storico lombardo(1892), page 910.
  4. ^Villa ArconatiArchivedDecember 31, 2014, at theWayback Machineofficial website.
  5. ^Ville e castelli d'Italia: Lombardia e laghi,second edition, by Luca Beltrami, Editors of Tecnografica, Milan, (1907), pages 67 - 81.
  6. ^"History".villaarconati.it.Retrieved2015-12-03.

45°33′22″N9°05′47″E/ 45.5560°N 9.0963°E/45.5560; 9.0963