Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Bagatti Valsecchi Museum

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Location
  
Milan

Province
  
Province of Milan

Artwork
  
St. Giustina de' Borromei

Established
  
1974

Phone
  
+39 02 7600 6132

Director
  
Pier Fausto Bagatti Valsecchi

Website
  
www.museobagattivalsecchi.org and www.bagattivalsecchi.house.museum

Address
  
Via Gesù, 5, 20121 Milano, Italy

Hours
  
Open today · 1–5:45PMTuesday1–5:45PMWednesday1–5:45PMThursday1–5:45PMFriday1–5:45PMSaturday1–5:45PMSunday1–5:45PMMondayClosed

Architectural style
  
Renaissance Revival architecture

Similar
  
Museo Poldi Pezzoli, Casa‑museo Boschi Di Stefano, Villa Necchi Campiglio, Galleria d'Arte Moderna, Museo Civico di Storia Nat

Profiles

The Bagatti Valsecchi Museum is a historic house museum in the Montenapoleone district [1] of downtown Milan, northern Italy.

Contents

The Bagatti Valsecchi Museum’s permanent collections principally contain Italian Renaissance decorative arts (such as maiolica, furniture, tapestry, metalwork, leather, glassware and precious table-top coffers made of ivory, or “stucco and pastiglia”), some sculptures (including a Madonna and Child lunette by a follower of Donatello), and many paintings. European Renaissance weapons, armor, clocks and a few textiles and scientific and musical instruments complete the collection assembled by the Barons Bagatti Valsecchi, and displayed in their home, as per their wishes.

Paintings

The Bagatti Valsecchi Museum, although originally intended as a private home, not a gallery, has an interesting collection of Italian Renaissance paintings. A few are from the Trecento/14th century and the Seicento/17th century, but most date to the Quattrocento/15th century, or the Cinquecento/16th century. They include:

  • S. Giustina de’ Borromeis, Giovanni Bellini, c. 1475
  • Beatified Lorenzo Giustiniani, Gentile Bellini, c. 1470, in its original frame
  • Christ in Majesty, Virgin, Christ Child and Saints, Giovanni Pietro Rizzoli, aka Giampietrino, 1540s (painter inspired by Leonardo da Vinci)
  • S. Francis, S. John the Baptist, Bernardo Zenale, c. 1507 (painter inspired by Leonardo da Vinci)
  • S. Francis and S. Mary Magdalen; the Prophet Isaiah, Lorenzo di Niccolò, active in Florence between 1391 and 1412, originally found in the Medici Chapel of Santa Croce, Florence
  • Four allegorical figures, Andrea Lilio, oil on canvas, 1640s
  • DEMHIST

    The Bagatti Valsecchi Museum, home to DEMHIST, ICOM's International Committee for Historic House Museums from its founding in 1998 until the end of the board’s first triennial in 2002, continues to support activities geared to furthering our understanding of this kind of museum. For this reason, the indexes of the first three DEMHIST Acts for the conferences are available online on the DEMHIST page of the Bagatti Valsecchi Museum website. References to other publications, including the Acts of a 2005 conference on historic house museums in Milan, are also available.

    References

    Bagatti Valsecchi Museum Wikipedia