Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Sant'Antonio Abate, Parma

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Location
  
Parma, Italy

Province
  
Province of Parma

Phone
  
+39 0521 238953

Architect
  
Ferdinando Galli-Bibiena

Affiliation
  
Catholic

Architectural style
  
Baroque architecture

Groundbreaking
  
1766

Sant'Antonio Abate, Parma

Address
  
Str. della Repubblica, 52, 43121 Parma PR, Italy

Similar
  
San Quintino - Parma, Chiesa parrocchiale di San To, San Sepolcro - Parma, Santa Maria degli Angeli - P, San Pietro d'Alcantara - Parma

The church of Sant'Antonio Abate is located in Parma, Italy.

Contents

History

Initial construction of a church at the site began in 1386 and ended in 1404, under the commission of Canons Regular of St. Anthony of Vienna. Under the commission of Cardinal Antonio Francesco Sanvitale and a donation by Pope Clement XIII, in the 1700s the church was rebuilt to designs of the architect and decorator Ferdinando Galli-Bibiena. The church was reconsecrated in 1766.

Art

The interior contains decorations by the Paremesan painters Gaetano Ghidetti and Antonio Bresciani; the ceiling frescoes of Angels and the Apotheosis of St. Anthony and the main altarpiece are by Giuseppe Peroni.

The chapels contain paintings by Pompeo Batoni (John the Baptist Preaching), by Giovanni Gottardi, (St Peter Escapes), and by Giambettino Cignaroli (Flight to Egypt). The painting by Correggio, Madonna of St Jerome, was painted for this church. It had been removed to the Ducal palace by the 18th century, then looted and taken to Paris in 1796, but returned in 1814 and now is in Galleria nazionale di Parma.

The stucco sculptures in the niches around the altar are by Gaetano Callani representing the Beatitudes.

This beautiful church has an unusual "two-layer" ceiling. "Holes" in the usual inner shell allow you to see through to a second, higher ceiling, with further paintings of heavenly bodies. (Only the five holes above the nave in the accompanying photograph are examples of this. The bright openings in the apse are merely normal windows.)

References

Sant'Antonio Abate, Parma Wikipedia