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A
new
museum has been opened in Rome, after a lengthy and intricate campaign
repair which are still in progress on others buildings in the Park of
Villa Torlonia.
The Villa Torlonia complex has been expropriated
and opened to the pubblic from the Municipality in the 1978 but, while
the park has been used immediately, the uncertain conditions in
which the buildings were, imposed lengthy and expensive repairs.
The "Casina delle Civette", plunged
among the Californian palms and Himalaya cedars, was planned by the
architect Jappelli in the 1842 like a "capanna svizzera" and reflected
the purpose of solitary and romantic refuge: primitive and wild, typical
of english gardens.
From1908 widening works of the architects Fasolo e Cambellotti changed
it in the "Casina delle Civette" which became the favourite residence
of Torlonia's prince.
Fasolo was inspired by the style of the Middle Ages: moorish greenhouse,
medieval towers, Gothic cathedrals, drooping roofs, oriental fantasies.
All enriched by a fantasious sequence of elements, made of stairs, merlons,
tiled drooping roofs, coloured ceramics and a brick wall at sight.
Cambellotti added stained-glass windows with naturalistic decorations.
A particular care has been take in the fittings of the octagonal cupola
all covered with boiseries and stuccos.
"La Casina delle Civette" is called so because there are many decoration
elements inspired to the owl's theme or others nocturnal birds such
as griffons and bats.
In the build, restored after a lenghty
series of repairs, it's now contained a unique museum of the kind, either
for the topic handled or for the tight association between the materials
used and the structure of the Casina itself.
"La Casina delle Civette", is indeed, a
museum of the roman versatility, in which we can see the development,
from the middle of the nineteenth century to the early decades of the
twentieth century.
Characteristics of the museum are the beautifull
stained-glass windows, made by precious polychromes glasses.
They have been made between 1908 and 1930 by artists such as Umberto
Bottazzi, Duilio Cambellotti, Vittorio Grassi, Paolo Boschetto, and
they offer a unique exemple to study the evolution of the stained-glass
windows in Rome in those years.
To conclude an outline of the stained-glass
windows the "Sovraintendenza Comunale" has bought on the market many
others of them of the same authors to set up this particular museum.
Among the best stained-glass windows we can remind "the owls" by Cambellotti
and "the peafowls" made by Bottazzi, showed in the 1912 glass-window
exhibition and from then disappeared, traced and brought recently from
a private collection.
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