- Giuseppe Venanzio Marvuglia
Giuseppe Venanzio Marvuglia (1729 – 1814) was an Italian architect.
He received his first training in his native
Palermo . This was followed by a period inRome from 1747 to 1759. By the end of his stay a handful of progressive young architects and designers in the circuit of the French Academy in Rome were moving away from the ornateBaroque towards a more simple, more classical form of architecture under the influence of the architectJohann Joachim Winckelmann who was a protegé of CardinalAlessandro Albani .Marvuglia won the second prize in a contest organised by the
Accademia San Luca , for a town square. His entry had at its centre a circular domed building reminiscent of the Pantheon in Rome, but with Baroque features in its columns and statuary.Following his return to Sicily, he worked on the rebuilding of the monastery of San Martino delle Scale, in the mountains near Palermo; while he designed this in Baroque style, evidence that the tide of fashion was flowing towards
Neoclassicism is evident through the straight clean lines as opposed to the curved facades and broken rooflines of typicalSicilian Baroque .Though much of Marvuglia's work was in municipal architecture two churches are credited to him. One, at the very start of his independent career, is 'S. Filippo Neri' (1769): rather than in high Baroque it is built with a
facade divided into three square divisions decorated with panels of bas-relief. Thepilaster s are flat and plain. The pediments are unbroken. The interior of the church has a gildedbarrel vault ed ceiling, supported by greatmarble columns. What is unusual and a break in the Sicilian Baroque tradition here is that the columns do not support an arcade, but a flatentablature . This church, much preferred by English visitors in the 18th century to the ornate Sicilian Baroque, shows clearly the beginning of tastes moving from the Baroque towards a less decorated order.Later, in the church of San Francesco di Sales, in Corso Calatafimi, Palermo (1772 – 1776, consecrated May 8, 1818) Marvuglia interpreted a classicizing Palladian program of paired pilasters in the piers of an abbreviated arcade giving onto two pairs of side chapels, supporting a cornice carried without an interruption entirely round the space, integrating the sober pedimented tablernacle of the high altar, all in a restrained tonality of white and cream that to an early viewer was "semplice e senza ornamenti" ("simple and without ornaments") as indeed it was in the context of Late Baroque Palermo.
As an architect Marvuglia showed great understanding of proportion and mass. His Palazzo Constantino, a project he took over in 1787 shows a fusion of both the Neoclassical and
Palladian . His Palazzo Riso-Belmonte completed in 1784 clearly shows better than any other in Sicily the final days of Sicilian Baroque as it was transformed into Neoclassicism; the unbroken skyline and the plain almost severe pillars and unbroken window pediments, far outweigh the Baroque sentiments in internal arcaded courtyard.Marvuglia designed two
villa s at the newly fashionable aristocratic enclave ofBagheria . The Villa Villarosa, while neoclassical in spirit is clearly influenced by the hôtels by Gabriel on the Place Louis XV inParis . ForFerdinand I of Naples , forced into temporary residence in Sicily by the republican revoilution and the Napoleonic occupation, he designed a whimsical "Casina Cinese" in the royal park of La Favorita outside Palermo and at Ficuzza a long unbroken block of a severely classical villa with very little relief and an unbroken cornice.As a teacher of architecture Marvuglia strongly supported the study of Sicily's Greek temples, however, in spite of his later reputation as a Neoclassical architect he never applied to his own work the strict rules and proportions he found in his studies of ancient Greek architecture.
He died in Palermo in 1814.
External links
* [http://www.bestofsicily.com/mag/art113.htm Carlo Trabia, "Ficuzza Hunting lodge"]
* [http://www.palermoweb.com/didattica/apreleporte03/siti/Educandato%20-%20Cappella%20del%20Marvuglia/default.htm Cappella del Marvuglia" (the Church of San Francesco di Sales)] : brief biography (in Italian)
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