- Villa Pigneto del Marchese Sacchetti
The Villa Pigneto or Sacchetti, or also the Casino al Pigneto del Marchese Sacchetti was an architecturally prominent building designed by the
Baroque artistPietro da Cortona . A second, plainer, Villa Sacchetti, now called "Villa Chigi", is found atCastelfusano near Ostia and was decorated (if not designed) by Cortona] . It was an elaborately decorated suburbancasino or (lodge), that stood only for some decades after completion in 1630, just at the then-outskirts of Rome (now "Pigneto Sacchetti" train stop) at the foot ofMonte Mario . From the top rampart of the garden entrance, one should have been able to glimpse above the surrounding pine forest (pigneto) the domes ofSt Peter's Basilica and central Rome.As the name "
casino " implies, this was a 'pleasure house', a lodge for where notables could take refuge from the crowded Rome. The "villa suburbana" was commissioned by the Florentine MarcheseMarcello Sacchetti , papal treasurer of the profligate BarberiniPope Urban VIII . Other members of this family, benefited for a few decades from association with the pope, including his brother Giulio, named cardinal, and another brother, named general of papal armies. Cortona, a fellow Tuscan, designed the villa for his long-time patron.We can only reconstruct the villa from etchings, paintings, plans, and scant architectural ruins left, although the findings generally agree. It was one of Cortona's first designs. The house was built on a high plinth on a hillside. The favored garden approach had 3 tiers, not unlike Vignola's
Villa Giulia from the previous century; daring symmetric flights of stairs gave drama to the entrance and flanked a large basin-fountain with cascading waters and anymphaeum . Atop a three story pavilion with lower foward thrusting wings. The concave forward embrace of the wings is reinforced by the centralexedra , which recalls theBelvedere 'sCortile della Pigna . Unlike the Villa Giulia and the Belvedere, the facade is elaborately decorated. Statuary, in a style reminiscent of Palladio'sPalazzo Chiericati (1550) atVicenza , crennelates the skyline. In a model to be repeated by Cortona's never-implemented plans for Palazzo Chigi in Rome and later by theTrevi Fountain , this palace integrates the fountains into the entrance.Unfortunately, within 50 years, the palace was in great disrepair, the Sacchettis and Barberini in low esteem, and the palace, like much in Rome, soon became a ruin. The villa also had its contemporary critics; Bernini likened the structure to a "Christmas crib" [ Connors J. p320.] In the middle of the 19th century, the site was sold by the surviving Sacchettis, and the remaining structure razed. It was, for its day a daring design, which influenced other baroque creations. Today, the area is a park ("Pineto") [http://www.romanatura.roma.it/parchi/pineto.php/] .
References
*cite journal|title=Pietro da Cortona 1597-1669|first=Joseph |last=Connors|journal= The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians|year=1998|pages=pp. 318–321|doi=10.2307/991350|volume=57
External links
*Domenico Pronti in 1790; [http://www.antiqueprints.com/proddetail.php?prod=e1773&cat=61]
*Giuseppe Vasi [http://www.romeartlover.it/Vasi183.htm]
* [http://www.italycyberguide.com/Geography/cities/rome2000/B1.htm Villa giulia]
*it icon [http://www.archeologia.beniculturali.it/pages/atlante/S75.html Museo Nazionale Etrusco information]
* [www.ips.it/scuola/concorso/bachelet/villa.htm]
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