Nec spe nec metu. La Gonzaga: Architettura e corte nella Milano di Carlo V.
Brown, Clifford M.
Nicola Soldini. Nec spe nec metu. La Gonzaga: Architettura e corte
nella Milano di Carlo V.
Ingenium 10. Florence: Leo S. Olschki, 2007. 512 pp. + 239 b/w pls.
index. append. illus. bibl. [euro]65. ISBN: 978-88-222-5628-7.
A number of publications (exhibition catalogues and conference
papers), ac companied the celebration of the 500th anniversary of the
birth of Ferrante Gonzaga (third-born son of Francesco II Gonzaga and
Isabella d'Este). Pride of place among these, some of which have an
only ephemeral value, goes to Soldini's text, which deals with one
specific aspect of Ferrante's patronage of the arts: the suburban
residence constructed for the then governor of Milan by his court
architect Domenico Giunti in the period after 1548. Greatly admired in
its time by Paolo Giovio among others, it was only one of eight
buildings that Marc'Antonio Dal Re included in his Ville di delizia
o siano palago camparacci nello Stato di Milano; those engravings being
indispensable in reconstructed what little now remains of the once
imposing building and its gardens.
Soldoni's mongraph concludes with an Appendice Documentaria
that provides transcriptions of a surprising number of previously
unpublished letters written to Ferrante by Giunti. As the central core
of the residence was the modest villa built for a member of Ludovico
Sforza's inner circle (Gualtero Bascape), due attention is given at
the outset to Bascape's life and career, including where it
intersected with Leonardo da Vinci and thus with the Sala delle Asse in
the Ducal Palace. From here the text moves on to what happened after the
structure was acquired in 1548 by Ferrante at which time two wings were
added thereby reconfiguring it as a U-shaped residence. The main facade
was defined by an imposing triple loggia, the rear facade overlooking
the fish pond and the gardens. Perhaps not quite as impressive as the
Palazzo Te in Mantua, which Giulio Romano built and decorated for his
brother, Federico II, it nonetheless took Rome as its model. Had
Ferrante taken up Leone Leoni on his offer of the casts of antique
statuary, then the connection between the residence and Rome would have
been even more striking. Even without such embellishments, the
connection between the main facade and such classical models as the
Colosseum is striking. And as the author noted, the Colosseum is but one
of the classical buildings actually drawn by Domenico Giunti. Since
Giunti has never been given monographic treatment, the author goes to
considerable pains to chronicle the various phases of his career, which
began as a painter and then as an architect working first for Ferrante
in Messina and then in Milan and finally in the designing of Guastalla
in the Mantuan countryside. The last was arguably the most important of
all, for whereas Ferrante resided in Messina and Milan at the pleasure
of the emperor, Guastalla was purchased by him to serve the needs of his
sons and heirs.
What is most impressive in this book is the lengths to which the
author goes to focus on even the most peripheral and minute of details.
One example of this is found in the discussion of the Fructus Belli, one
of the more monumental of the sets of tapestries designed for Ferrante
by Giulio Romano. For them new documentation regarding the dating of the
series is provided, as well as a reading of the iconography that differs
significantly from what has previously been written. In a word,
Soldini's monograph is densely layered with useful insights and
observations at every point. It is, however, not a text to be read with
ease, but then this was doubtless not the author's intent. Rather,
the author takes great pains to explore all the known and many of the
previously unpublished archival sources (a listing of those in Milan,
Florence, Mantua, Modena et al. being provided at the beginning of the
book) and uses them to complement and supplement the visual evidence.
And finally, it should be noted that the author has taken pains to
relate Giunti's creation to both earlier and contemporary examples.
CLIFFORD M. BROWN
Carleton University, Ottawa