Museo d'Arte Sacra della Marsica

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Museo d'Arte Sacra della Marsica
Celano museo arte sacra Marsica.jpg
Museo d'Arte Sacra della Marsica
Italy Abruzzo location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Location within Abruzzo
Location Celano
Type Religious art
Website http://www.museodellamarsica.beniculturali.it/

Museo d'Arte Sacra della Marsica (Italian for Religious art Museum of Marsica) is a museum of religious art in Celano, Province of L'Aquila (Abruzzo). [1]

Contents

History

Interior of Castello Piccolomini Celano Castello Innenhof3 FoNo.jpg
Interior of Castello Piccolomini

The Museum of Sacred Art of Marsica is a national museum housed in nine rooms within the Piccolomini Castle in Celano, AQ, in the Marsica region of Abruzzo.

The castle was founded in the late 14th century by the Berardi family, owners of the County of Celano, and later completed in the mid-15th century by the Piccolomini family who succeeded them. In the courtyard, remnants of 15th-century frescoes are visible, while some ground floor rooms house the archaeological section. The museum was set up in collaboration with the Diocese of Marsi.

The museum visit begins on the first floor: the rooms collect the major artistic expressions of Marsica in sculpture, painting, goldsmithing, and weaving, spanning from the 6th to the 18th centuries. Among other treasures, it houses a Crucifixion of Jesus from the school of Vincenzo Foppa, a bust of the Madonna from around 1440 by painter Andrea De Litio, considered his first executed work, and the stem cross of Cese from the 14th century. The collection also includes a series of Byzantine-style paintings and numerous Madonnas with Child from the 1200s.

The rooms are structured as follows:

Some exhibited works come from the Church of Santa Maria in Cellis in Carsoli and from the Church of San Pietro near Alba Fucens in the municipality of Massa d'Albe, including a Virgin by Andrea De Litio. From Aielli come the restored and recomposed remains of two 1st-century BC bone beds recovered from four chamber tombs unearthed in 1936. [2] In the courtyard, portals from the churches of San Nicola in Marano dei Marsi and San Salvatore in Paterno have been placed.

The Torlonia Collection, housed in the archaeology section, consists of 184 objects and 344 Roman bronze coins. These works were recovered during the draining of Lake Fucino. Among the highlights is a head of Aphrodite (3rd-2nd century BC). Many artifacts also originate from the site of Lucus Angitiae.

Since December 2014, it has been managed by the Ministry of Culture through the Abruzzo Museum Center, which became the Regional Directorate of Museums in December 2019.

Collection

Madonna Enthroned with Child (1130), known as the Madonna of Castelli Maestro abruzzese, madonna in trono col bambino detta di castelli, 1130 ca. (celano, museo d'arte sacra della marsica) 01.jpg
Madonna Enthroned with Child (1130), known as the Madonna of Castelli

The archaeological collection comes from excavations conducted in the territories of Avezzano, Luco dei Marsi, Collarmele, Alba Fucens, and San Benedetto dei Marsi. The archaeological path winds through a hall starting from the earliest periods, including the Paleolithic and Neolithic, with findings of flint spearheads evolving into iron and bronze, leading to early devotional sculptures of classical deities. Also included are objects like pottery, fibulae, and combs used in warfare or domestic settings, categorized by the gender of the deceased.

The most significant pieces are from the Torlonia Collection, relating to the drainers and princes of Lake Fucino, such as an ivory lion head and a large bas-relief, originally part of a larger single block that depicted three-dimensionally the city of Marruvium (the capital of the Marsi) near San Benedetto dei Marsi. This sculptural block represents a masterpiece of Abruzzese Roman sculpture, showing the walled city, sacred buildings, major temples, baths, and an amphitheater. On the right side, isolated in a forest, is the sanctuary of the goddess Angizia near Lucus Angitiae, close to modern-day Luco dei Marsi.

The archaeological collection extends to the late Lombard period, featuring panels that once adorned windows, cut and shaped in the form of a Greek cross, originating from vanished churches.

Stone Artifacts

Displayed are 27 works, all originating from the Church of San Pietro in Alba Fucens, dating between the 11th and 12th centuries. The artifacts consist of lintels from doorways or entire portals salvaged from destroyed churches, such as the 14th-century apostate portal from the Church of San Nicola in Marano dei Marsi, or the ruined Church of San Salvatore in Paterno (Avezzano), saved in the 19th century by Antonio De Nino, and initially installed at the Church of Carmine in Celano. [3]

Medieval portal of the Church of San Nicola in Marano dei Marsi Portale San Nicola di Marano.jpg
Medieval portal of the Church of San Nicola in Marano dei Marsi

From the Church of San Pietro in Alba Fucens, there is a Romanesque tombstone depicting two intertwined dragons on their necks, a square panel with a pierced rose window and intertwined ribbon frame, reflecting Lombard art. Also included is a panel with a griffin, a sculpture of a mermaid, a lion grasping a person, and a remarkable fragment studied by Pier Luigi Calore, Ignazio Carlo Gavini, Pietro Piccirilli, and Mario Moretti, depicting a mermaid with a half-human, half-fish appearance being grasped by a griffin.

Wooden Lintels

Lintels (unknown, 1132) The lintels originate from the Church of Santa Maria in Cellis in Carsoli and date back to 1132. After the 1915 Avezzano earthquake, they were transported to the National Museum of Abruzzo in L'Aquila (formerly the Civic Archaeological Museum) and later moved to Celano. The lintels depict scenes from the life of Christ: the Annunciation, the Visitation, the Nativity, the Announcement to the Shepherds, the Adoration of the Magi, the Massacre of the Innocents, the Presentation of Jesus at the Temple, Jesus among the Doctors of the Temple, with the last two scenes being indecipherable. A distinctive feature is that one door leaf is narrower than the other.

Lintels (unknown, 12th century) They come from the Church of San Pietro in Alba Fucens and are the most damaged in this room. Due to stylistic similarities, the author may be the same as those from Carsoli. The lintels were first taken to Rome for restoration and for a period were exhibited at the Palazzo Venezia Museum before being transferred to the National Museum of Abruzzo in L'Aquila. They finally found their place in Celano.

Pinacoteca and Sculptures

The Virgin known as Madonna of Cese, 15th-century tempera on panel by Andrea De Litio Andrea De Litio Madonna di Cese.jpg
The Virgin known as Madonna of Cese , 15th-century tempera on panel by Andrea De Litio
Madonna de Ambro, from MUNDA (L'Aquila), 13th century Pittore di ambito benedettino, madonna de ambro, 1200-50 ca, da s.m. a grajano, fontecchio (AQ) 01.jpg
Madonna de Ambro, from MUNDA (L'Aquila), 13th century

Below is a partial list of the artworks on display:

Processional astile cross from the Church of Santa Maria in Rosciolo dei Marsi (14th century) Fabrizio pipino, croce processionale, 1600-50 ca., argento su legno (celano, museo d'arte sacra della marsica) 01.jpg
Processional astile cross from the Church of Santa Maria in Rosciolo dei Marsi (14th century)

Hall of Silver Reliquaries

These consist of liturgical vestments in silver and gold, ostensories, containers for hosts and incense, pyxes, and containers with intricately designed lids featuring reliefs such as the Lamb bearing the cross; most of them originate from the Church of San Pietro in Alba Fucens, previously exhibited at the Palazzo Venezia Museum. Other artifacts include covers for missals in gold sheets, elaborately chased and set with precious stones, some adorned with historical scenes like the Crucifixion.

Hall of Vintage Games

A recently arranged hall located in the vestibule of the cloister with a well; it showcases wooden and cloth games from the 20th century, alongside textbooks, primers, and alphabet books for elementary school.

Notes

  1. "Museo d'arte sacra della Marsica (Castello Piccolomini)" (in Italian). Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo. Archived from the original on 2023-11-24. Retrieved 31 May 2016.
  2. "Exhibition of bone beds". MiBACT. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
  3. Ignazio Carlo Gavini (1927). Storia dell'architettura in Abruzzo. Vol. 2. pp. 62–328.
  4. "The Virgin". Archived from the original on 28 September 2015. Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  5. "Madonna and Child". Direzione Regionale Musei Abruzzo. Archived from the original on 25 November 2022. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  6. "National Museum of Sacred Art of Marsica". Touring Club Italiano.
  7. "Madonna "de Ambro"". Archived from the original on 23 October 2021. Retrieved 12 January 2021.

42°05′05″N13°32′42″E / 42.0846°N 13.5451°E / 42.0846; 13.5451

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