Palazzo del Banco Mediceo | |
---|---|
Alternative names | Banco Mediceo |
General information | |
Status | Demolished |
Type | Palace |
Architectural style | Renaissance |
Location | Milan, Italy |
Address | Via dei Bossi |
Construction started | XVth century |
The Palazzo del Banco Mediceo or simply Banco Mediceo, was a palace in Milan, the Milanese seat of the Medici's financial exchange activities, known throughout Europe as the Medici Bank. It was one of the earliest examples of Lombard Renaissance architecture.
The palace was located in Via dei Bossi, in the sestiere di Porta Comasina, where the Teatro alla Scala would later be built. The patron was Pigello Portinari, representative of the Medici family in the Sforzesca Milan. The building in some way sanctioned an alliance, which closed centuries of enmity between Milan and Florence, between Francesco Sforza, who in 1455 donated a pre-existing building destined to be transformed into the seat of the Banco and Cosimo de' Medici, who ordered his representative to build a new and representative palace to honour the city of Milan. [1] The work was carried out rapidly and was completed around 1459.
The appearance of the building is known to us from Filarete's treatise, which contains, in addition to some news, an engraving illustrating the main façade that featured innovative elements of the Tuscan Renaissance, combined with more traditional elements of Milanese architectural practice. The palace shows a symmetrical façade with an ashlar base, a monumental portal, a piano nobile with paired windows set on another cornice, crowning the building with an antique-style cornice. The building also had rich decoration, including ceramic roundels placed just below the cornice. The building’s designer is not known with certainty, although the traditional attribution, though without documentary evidence, is that of Michelozzo, [2] a trusted architect of the Medici family. Recently the attribution to Filarete prevails, [3] assisted by local craftsmen. [4] However, Filarete does not attribute the project to himself in the pages of his treatise. [5]
Around 1456, the loggia and rooms were decorated, again according to Filarete, by the greatest Lombard artist of the time, Vincenzo Foppa, with frescoes with an exceptionally profane subject of which only a fragment with Child reading Cicero|Cicero child reading in the Wallace Collection in London has survived. Other frescoes were by Zanetto Bugatto.
The building was demolished at the end of the 18th century during urban development around the teatro alla Scala. A monumental portal remains of it, preserved at the Museo d’arte antica in the Museo d’arte antica, characterised by an overabundant Lombard-Tuscan sculptural decoration by Guiniforte Solari and Giovanni Antonio Amadeo. A number of terracotta tondi with antique portraits can be found in the Pinacoteca del Castello Sforzesco.
Vincenzo Foppa was an Italian painter from the Renaissance period. While few of his works survive, he was an esteemed and influential painter during his time and is considered the preeminent leader of the Early Lombard School. He spent his career working for the Sforza family, Dukes of Milan, in Pavia, as well as various other patrons throughout Lombardy and Liguria. He lived and worked in his native Brescia during his later years.
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