Palazzo Chiericati
Palladio, Andrea
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Date
1547-1680Description
View of the portico elevation, at the north end, left of the entry; In November 1550, Girolamo Chiericati recorded a payment to Palladio in his own "account book" for the designs of his palace in the city, sketched out at the beginning of the year. In the same month, Girolamo was appointed to supervise the administration of the building works on the Loggias of the Basilica, inaugurated in May 1549. This coincidence was not remotely casual: along with Trissino, Chiericati was among those who sponsored entrusting this prestigious public commission to the young architect, for whose interests he had personally fought in the Council, and to whom he would turn for the design of his own home. Moreover, a few years later his brother Giovanni would also commission from Palladio the villa at Vancimuglio. To endow the building with magnificence, but also to protect it from the frequent floods (and from the cattle sold in front of the palace on market days), Palladio raised the palace on a podium, whose central section displays a stairway clearly adapted from an antique temple. Source: Centro Internazionale di Studi di Architettura Andrea Palladio (Palladio Centre and Museum) ; http://www.cisapalladio.org/ (accessed 1/26/2008)
Type of Work
palazzoSubject
architectural exteriors, Renaissance
Rights
Rights Statement
Licensed for educational and research use by the MIT community only