|
Villa
Monastero today is one of the most interesting examples of an eclectic
style residence on lake Como; here the interventions from the end of XIX
and the beginning of XX century have added functional and decorative elements
without damaging the traces of the building's history
Villa Monastero has developed
from the continual restoration work of the ancient cistercensian monastery
of Santa Maria, first quoted in a document dated 1208. Its foundation
is probably related to the religious settlings on the opposite side of
lake Como: the St. Faustino and St. Giovita monastery on Comacina island
from whence came some refugees in 1169.
In 1566 the archbishop Carlo Borromeo
decided to transfer the last six nuns of the Varenna monastery to another
cistercensian monastery in Lecco; as a consequence, in 1569, the monastery
buildings were sold to Paolo Mornico.
The
actual Fermi conference room was once the old church. The only surviving
decoration is a small frescoed "Pietà", painted in the
late-gothic period and inserted in a niche in the wall. The Renaissance
altarpiece, which was on the main altar, today is to be found in the left
chapel of the parish S. Giorgio church.
The
Mornico family owned the Villa Monastero buildings from 1569 to 1862,
when the Villa underwent major restoration works, such as the façade
of the Villa and the two rooms on the ground floor, the Rossa and Nera
rooms. The Fermi room door's wood frame is also of the XVII century.
From the second half of XIX
century the Villa underwent many changes made by the different owners
(Genazzini, Maumary Seufferheld, Kees, De Marchi) which gave the Villa
its actual eclectic appearance. The garden was also enriched with Mediterranean
and tropical plants.
Particularly
interesting is the staircase, scenographically realised using polychrome
marble, ceramics, stucco works. The so-called "Pompeian" or
"King Farouk" bathroom is also a further example of this style.
After confiscation in 1918 the property
went to the "Opera Nazionale Combattenti", a state association,
that then sold it to Mr. Marco De Marchi, who left it to the Italian Institute
of Hydrobiology "Dr. Marco De Marchi".
Internationally known literates, historians,
artists, scientists, even the Nobel Prize winner Enrico Fermi, to whose
memory a plaque has been placed, have honoured Villa Monastero since 1953
when this prestigious abode became a Congress Centre for high level studies
thanks to prof. Polvani, President of the Italian Society of Physics,
and Mr. Bosisio, then President of the Provincial Administration of Como.
Since 1963 the villa has become an
international cultural and scientific centre.
In 1977 the Villa changed ownership
for the last time and now belongs to C.N.R. (National Counsel for Research).
In 1996 the new Province of Lecco
took over the Centre's cultural service by stipulating an agreement with
the C.N.R., owner of the buildings, and founding the Institution "Villa
Monastero".
The Province of Lecco continues
the work of conservation and structural support, coordinating the work
initiated by the owner to renew and functionalize the complex in full
respect of its particular architecture. General intervention work has
also been possible thanks to the generous contribution of the CARIPLO
Foundation.
|