Ducal Palace of Sassuolo | |
Native Name: | Palazzo ducale di Sassuolo |
Native Name Lang: | Italian |
Building Type: | Palace |
Architectural Style: | Italian Baroque |
Client: | Francesco I d'Este |
Location: | Sassuolo, Province of Modena, Italy |
Floor Count: | 3 |
Architect: | Bartolomeo Avanzini |
Website: | www.gallerie-estensi.beniculturali.it/palazzo-ducale |
The Ducal Palace in Sassuolo is a Baroque villa located in the town of Sassuolo, thirty minutes outside Modena, northern Italy.
The palace was built on the site of a medieval castle or rocca. Obtained by Niccolò III d'Este from the della Rosa family in the 15th century, and converted into a court residence by Borso d'Este in 1458.[1]
The exterior facade seems to reference Tuscan villas more than those of the Veneto. In the mid-16th century, the first pleasure summer villa was built on the site. In the early 17th century, the Duke Francesco I d'Este commissioned the present building from the architect Bartolomeo Avanzini. Over the centuries, the palace has had many owners, but is now owned by the town of Sassuolo and the Gallerie Estensi, who contributed to the picture galleries the Orlando, Princess and Secchia apartments.[2]
The palace is best known for its highly decorated interior frescoes (1638-1656) by the French Este court painter Jean Boulanger, as well as several perspectival ceilings by Ottavio Vivani, Giacomo Cialdieri, Angelo Michele Colonna, Agostino Mitelli, Baldassare Bianchi and Giovanni Giacomo Monti. Lattanzio Maschio and Luca Colombi were also invited by Boulanger to work on the palace stucco decoration. Giovanni Lazzoni, Nicolas Régnier, Salvator Rosa, and Ludovico Lana also contributed to the palace's art collection.
The palace is also known for its garden vistas reminiscent of Versailles and its fanciful Peschiera or fish-tank. The latter was originally designed by Avanzini and as a large rectangular "pool" surrounded by a boundary wall in the form of a ruined amphitheatre, for which it earned its sobriquet the "Fontanazzo" (Rough Fountain).[3] Highlights of the complex also include larger-than-life fountain sculptures based on the designs of Gian Lorenzo Bernini and Renaissance fresco fragments by Nicolò dell’Abbate recovered from the Scandiano palace in Reggio Emilia.
Restoration of the piano nobile in 2001 has allowed the palace to be equally used as a space for contemporary art exhibitions, fusing past and present. Terminating the tour of the Duke and Duchesses’ private and public apartments on the first floor, the Stucco
· The Musicians of the Scandiano Room of Paradise frescoes by Nicolò dell’Abbate
· Baptism of Christ by Luigi Anguissola
· Portrait of Francesco II d’Este by Andrea Baratta (nicknamed "the monkey")
· Allegory of Music; Ten Virtues by Jean Boulanger
· Thank you; Going home; Family; Under the shadow by Lawrence Carroll
· Religious effigies by Pierfrancesco Cittadini
· Market scene with fish and meat seller with Christ in Martha’s house attributed to Flemish school.
· The Dead Christ Mourned, attributed to Abraham Janssens
· Madonna of Fiorano by Ludovico Lana
· St John the Baptist by Camillo Procaccini
· Madonna of the Pearls by follower of Raphael
· Francesco I with his wife Maria Farnese and their children Alfonso and Isabella by Nicolas Régnier.