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although work began in 1539 and was completed in 1542 (with some later reworking)
It is the first certain work by Andrea Palladio: the architect himself is credited with its authorship in the Quattro libri dell’architettura
A villa with a symmetrical layout and compact
by the three arches that define the central loggia
and impressive to the eye thanks to the setback of the central portion of the façade
The interior was frescoed between the 1640s and 1660s by Gualtiero Padovano
Battista del Moro and Giovanni Battista Zelotti
still excellently preserved and thus able to offer
one of the most complete combinations of architecture and painting
was chosen as the set for Luchino Visconti’s film Senso
It was built for Giuseppe and Antonio Valmarana, members of one of Vicenza’s most illustrious families. A number of Palladio’s autograph drawings have been preserved, allowing us to place Villa Valmarana di Vigardolo (also known as Villa Valmarana Bressan) among the first villas designed by the Paduan architect
which has a rather severe sloping façade
is inspired by the great baths of ancient Rome
which Palladio got to know during his first trip to Rome in 1541: the rooms are in fact covered by vaults and the loggia is reminiscent of that of the bath complexes of antiquity
This is an important stage in Palladio’s journey
has the opportunity to fine-tune the fruits of his first Roman sojourn
The interior was frescoed at several times: there are frescoes of the Veronese school
and others of the 18th century attributed to Costantino Pasqualotto
It is incomplete with respect to Palladio’s design, since the Doric portico planned along with the main body of the building is missing as well as the second facade (in fact, only the one facing the river can be seen), but Villa Pisani in Bagnolo, also known as Villa Pisani Bonetti
is one of the most important villas of the young Palladio
so much so that it opened the section on “Villa Houses” in the Four Books of Architecture
is also inspired by the buildings of classical antiquity
as can easily be seen from the façade that resembles that of a Roman temple
flanked by two wings that housed the service rooms
since this manor house also housed stables and dovecotes
and the paintings have been attributed to Francesco Torbido
A conspicuous body of drawings by Palladio richly documents the development of the project
It was commissioned in the late 1540s by Biagio Saraceno
who asked Palladio to work on an earlier rural building owned by his family
limited himself to intervening on the main body
leaving instead unchanged the buildings on the right side of the courtyard
which are fifteenth-century (the barchessa
the large portico intended to house the villa’s production activities
The villa represents a further development of Palladian architecture: in fact
it is a pure volume (a parallelepiped) in brick and plaster
with a facade that opens into an airy loggia surmounted by a tympanum
always reminiscent of the temples of ancient Rome
Simplicity also characterizes the floor plan: a T-shaped hall is surrounded by rooms linked in pairs
Among the Palladian villas, Villa Barbaro in Maser is perhaps one of the most spectacular
partly because its interior preserves a very famous cycle of frescoes that represents one of Paolo Veronese’s masterpieces
it was commissioned from Palladio in the early 1950s by the Barbaro brothers
who asked the architect to modify a pre-existing building.The Villa Barbaro also represents a novelty in Palladian architecture
because never before had the main body and the barchesse been united in a harmonious and compact manner as is the case in Maser
The villa thus presents itself with a rich façade always inspired by the forms of Roman temples (there are also four Ionic columns to support the pediment
and the windows themselves are surmounted by triangular and curvilinear tympanums)
the one to the west to mark the hours and seasons
and the one to the east to indicate the months of the zodiac
Villa Chiericati was begun by Palladio but was completed posthumously in 1584 by Domenico Groppino
an important villa in Palladio’s career: in fact
it is the first villa in which the body of the building is preceded by a pronaos identical to that of ancient temples
a solution that Palladio would later adopt for some of the most famous villas he designed
a member of another of Vicenza’s most prominent families
it was probably designed at the same time as the more famous Palazzo Chiericati in central Vicenza
Palladio modified the design for the Villa Chiericati during the course of construction
and eventually the building site dragged on for a very long time
so much so that the patron disappeared (in 1558) and
who bought it in 1574 and had it completed ten years later
This is the only Palladian villa in Polesine: it was commissioned in 1554 by the Venetian patrician Francesco Badoer
Villa Badoer stands on a high basement because it was built on top of an earlier building (Palladio may have been inspired by earlier works such as the Medici Villa at Poggio a Caiano
and it features a majestic pronaos with Ionic columns that introduces the building
which is reached by walking up the wide and scenic staircase
A further peculiarity of Villa Badoer are the barchesse
perhaps to suggest an idea of greater hospitality
and feature columns of Tuscanic order (one of the two barchesse now houses the National Archaeological Museum of Fratta Polesine)
The interior is frescoed with grotesques and mythological scenes: the author is an unidentified “Giallo Fiorentino” who has sparked debates among scholars about his real identity
In designing Villa Emo
Palladio was faced with the challenge of balancing the needs of a lord who wanted a residence as a place of pleasure but also as a place of intense agricultural activities: thus
by two long rectilinear barchesse that start from the basement dominated by the villa
which is accessed by walking up a stone ramp (a unicum in Palladian villas
motivated by practical reasons: it served in fact to facilitate the transportation of the products and goods that were produced in the appurtenances of Villa Emo)
The building is concluded on the sides by two tall dovecotes
Palladio also takes up the idea of the pronaos placed in front of the main body
houses one of the most significant fresco cycles by Giovanni Battista Zelotti
inspired by Ovid’s Metamorphoses and executed around 1565
the year in which the villa’s patron
Built in 1559 at the Malcontenta, a locality near Mira from which it takes its name, Villa Foscari was commissioned by Nicolò and Alvise Foscari
members of one of the most powerful families of the Venetian patriciate
much more so than the other villas Palladio had built up to that time (despite being built with brick and plaster and thus having no cladding in fine materials)
Situated on a high podium intended to create a parallel with the most spectacular temples of classical antiquity
it has the main façade (which
in this case the Naviglio del Brenta) preceded by a large Ionic pronaos
and is a three-story building with a symmetrical plan
The most striking feature is that the entrance to the villa is accessed
Particularly interesting is the rear facade
with windows that correspond to the interior layout of the rooms (see in particular the large thermal window
Located on the outskirts of Vicenza, Villa Capra
better known as “La Rotonda,” is perhaps the most famous villa designed by Andrea Palladio
and certainly the one that has had the most ascendancy in the history of architecture
imitated by an endless number of architects
It was commissioned by Count Paolo Almerico in 1565
and for its construction Palladio was inspired by the Pantheon: its source is evident when one admires the dome
used by the architect for the first time in a building intended for residential use
The centrally planned Rotonda is also known for its symmetrical proportions (it is in fact a square building that can be inscribed in a circle
and for its four facades with wide staircase and loggia
Villa Capra represents perhaps as close to Palladio’s ideas as possible
and it can be seen as a kind of model of his ideal architecture
inspired by his humanistic studies and his knowledge of ancient and Renaissance architecture
neither he nor the client managed to see the masterpiece finished
despite the fact that the villa was habitable as early as 1569: in fact
the completion was entrusted to Palladio’s most talented pupil