Text and Photos © Cesare Zucca
Get ready to be amazed!
Today I take you to Villa Dei Vescovi, a spectacular Venetian villa located in Luvigliano, a hamlet of Torreglia (Padua, Italy) .
This property is one of the jewels adopted by FAI is a non-profit foundation established in 1975, using the National Trust as a model, with the aim of protecting and enhancing Italy’s historical, artistic and landscape heritage, a perfect example of the humanistic culture, which wants to combine art, architecture and landscape in a daily experience that can stimulate towards elevated thoughts .
The construction dates back to the Renaissance and is inspired by a Roman domus. It can be considered the first example of the new taste for the rediscovered Roman classicism in the hinterland of the Serenissima Venezia.
The interior of the villa, divided on the main floor into the Hall of Ancient Figures, the Putto Hall, the Dining Hall (or of Apollo and Orpheus) and the bishop’s private rooms, was frescoed in the years 1542-1543 by the Flemish painter (active in Venice) Lambert Sustris, responsible for the frescoes in the internal rooms, where he wanted to recreate the architecture and external views of the villa in a perspective game that unites the interior with external nature.
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