THE DREAM of re-creating a splendid dwelling-place of the Renaissance period did not materialize by simply copying one single model. The brothers' inspiration came from numerous sources. The ideas they borrowed from outstanding examples were re-elaborated to create a Renaissance style in tune with 19th-century sensibilities, but in which the mark of the Bagatti Valsecchis is ever present.

BY NOW THE ANTIQUE market had little to offer and Fausto and Giuseppe could not limit their purchases to artefacts produced before 1520-1530. Their preference was nonetheless for pieces executed in the late 1400s / early 1500s. They collected architectural fragments, wall friezes, fireplaces, ornamental elements, furniture, household utensils, paintings and then used them to furnish and decorate the various rooms of their home.

THE RENAISSANCE blossomed again through old finds - especially paintings like Santa Giustina by Giovanni Bellini, St John the Baptist byt Bernardino Zenale and the Madonna Enthroned with Saints by Giampietrino - or splendid furniture like the 16th-century bed in Fausto's bedroom. When original pieces were damaged or incomplete, they were repaired or made whole again, so no missing element could spoil the all-encompassing integrity of the place. "No part of it, even of secondary importance, is neither old nor a perfect copy of an antique, with the result that everything is in harmony and reflects the chosen period to perfection": this is how, in 1885, the influential architect Vespasiano Paravicini described the palazzo then taking shape in neo-Renaissance style in the heart of 19th-century Milan.

 
19th-Century wrought iron washbasin with running water
 

19th-Century wrought iron washbasin with running water

 

Neo-Renaissance frieze in the Valtellinese Bedroom  
 

Neo-Renaissance frieze in the Valtellinese Bedroom

  

Armor of the 19th-century using 16th-century forms

 

Armor of the 19th-century using 16th-century forms

'Diligence increases the work's value'

The Rooms
Le Stanze

19th century velvet wall covering in the Bevilacqua Room

  

  19th century velvet wall covering in the Bevilacqua Room


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