Palazzo Bonomo Albrizzi
The Palazzo Bonomo Albrizzi , also simply called Palazzo Albrizzi , is a city palace in the Venetian sestiere of San Polo , which has been owned by the Albrizzi, a noble Venetian family, since the 17th century. The building erected by the bourgeois Bonomo at the end of the 16th century on today's Campiello Albrizzi (San Polo, 1940) was acquired by the Albrizzi family in 1648 and 1692. For the expansion in the second half of the 18th century, a number of small houses were bought in 1771 and then demolished, which stood in the way of the presentation of the facade. Isabella Teotochi Albrizzi ran a literary salon in the palace, which Ippolito Pindemonte , Ugo Foscolo and Antonio Canova visited.
In the Androne , the entrance to the interior, there is a galley lantern from Anelo Emo's admiral ship . The palace has stucco work by Abbondio Stazio (1663–1757) , especially in the portego . There are also paintings by Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini , Antonio Zanchi and Pietro Liberi (the latter made around 1670).
The garden belonging to the palace is on the other side of the adjacent Rio S. Cassiano and is only accessible via a private bridge. The Teatro San Cassiano, which was demolished that year, was located there until 1812.
The palazzo in an engraving by Vincenzo Maria Coronelli
The bridge between the Palazzo Albrizzi and its garden (painting by Antonietta Brandeis )
Web links
- Jan-Christoph Rößler: Palazzo Bonomo Albrizzi a San Apollinare
- Campiello Albrizzi , photos of the square, website by Massimo Bertacchi
Remarks
- ↑ Touring club italiano (ed.): Guida Venezia , Touring Editore, 3rd ed. 1985, p. 387.
Coordinates: 45 ° 26 ′ 18.3 " N , 12 ° 19 ′ 51.1" E