Carlo Scarpa
Carlo Scarpa
Carlo Scarpa
Esslinger Strae 24
D-70736 Stuttgart-Fellbach
tel. +49-711-5747 59
fax +49-711-5747 84
Opus 22
Carlo Scarpa, Museo Canoviano, Possagno
With an introduction by Stefan Buzas and Judith Carmel-Arthur and
photographs by Richard Bryant. 60 pp. with 50 ill. in b & w and colour,
280 x 300 mm, hard-cover, English
ISBN 978-3-930698-22-6
Euro 36.00, 24.00, US $ 42.00, $A 68.00
In a letter from London, dated 9 November 1815, Antonio Canova
wrote: ... Here I am in London, dear and best friend, a wonderful
city. ... I have seen the marbles arriving from Greece. Of the basreliefs
we had some ideas from engravings, but of the full colossal figures, in
which an artist can display his whole power and science, we have
known nothing. ... The figures of Phidias are all real and living flesh,
that is to say are beautiful nature itself.
With his admiring words for the famous Elgin Marbles Canova, one
of the last great artists embodying the grandiose heritage of the classical world, gave at the same time an appropriate description of his
own artistic aims.
It was his half-brother who decided to assemble most of Canovas
plaster originals and to place them in a museum he had built in the
garden of his brothers home in Possagno, a small village north of Venice, where the artist saw the light of day on 1 November 1757. This basilica-like building erected in 1836 now holds the great majority of Canovas compositions.
To commemorate the bicentenary of his birth, the Venetian authorities decided to have an extension added to the overcrowded basilica,
and they commissioned the Venetian architect Carlo Scarpa for this
delicate task. Scarpa composed a small, but highly articulated building that is in a strong contrast to the neo-Classical, monumental basilica.
The subtly designed sequence of spaces is unique even among
Scarpas so many extraordinary museum interiors as the architect
was here in the rare position to compose the spaces as well as the
placings of the exhibits. The placing of the sources of natural light
which infuses the plaster surfaces with the softness of real life is in itself a rare achievement and it took an equally rare photographer to
record such symphonies in white in all their magic.
Stefan Buzas was an architect who has studied the work of Scarpa
for many years. He was a member of the Faculty of Royal Designers for
Industry of the Royal Society of Arts in London. Judith Carmel-Arthur is
an American-born art and design historian. She has degrees in fine art
from California State University Humboldt, in architectural history from
Southern Illinois University, in history of art from the Courtauld Institute,
University of London, and a Ph. D. in design history from Kingston University. Richard Bryant is one of the best-known architectural photographers, working all over the world. He is the only photographer with an
honorary fellowship of the Royal Institute of British Architects.
2nd, revised edition
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In a letter from London, dated 9 November 1815, Antonio Canova wrote: ... Here I am in London, dear
and best friend, a wonderful city. ... I have seen the
marbles arriving from Greece. Of the basreliefs we
had some ideas from engravings, but of the full colossal figures, in which an artist can display his whole
power and science, we have known nothing. ... The
figures of Phidias are all real and living flesh, that is
to say are beautiful nature itself.
With his admiring words for the famous Elgin Marbles Canova, one of the last great artists embodying
the grandiose heritage of the classical world, gave at
the same time an appropriate description of his own
artistic aims.
It was his half-brother who decided to assemble
most of Canovas plaster originals and to place them
in a museum he had built in the garden of his brothers home in Possagno, a small village north of Venice, where the artist saw the light of day on 1 November 1757. This basilica-like building erected in 1836
now holds the great majority of Canovas compositions.
To commemorate the bicentenary of his birth, the
Venetian authorities decided to have an extension
added to the overcrowded basilica, and they commissioned the Venetian architect Carlo Scarpa for this
delicate task. Scarpa composed a small, but highly
articulated building that is in a strong contrast to the
Neoclassical, monumental basilica.
The subtly designed sequence of spaces is unique
even among Scarpas so many extraordinary museum
interiors as the architect was here in the rare position
to compose the spaces as well as the placings of the
exhibits. The placing of the sources of natural light
which infuses the plaster surfaces with the softness
of real life is in itself a rare achievement and it took an
equally rare photographer to record such symphonies
in white in all their magic.
The late Stefan Buzas was an architect who has
studied the work of Scarpa for many years. He was a
member of the Faculty of Royal Designers for Industry
of the Royal Society of Arts in London. Judith CarmelArthur took her degree in architectural history, and
subsequently studied at the Courtauld Institute and
Warburg Institute (University of London). She is a lecturer in design and architectural history at Kingston
University and the University of Southampton, and is
presently completing her PhD in the history of design.
Richard Bryant is one of the best-known architectural
photographers, working all over the world. He is the
only photographer with an honorary fellowship of the
Royal Institute of British Architects.
ISBN 978-3-930698-22-6
036.00
029.00
042.00
068.00
Euro
US $
$A
54200
783930 698226
Menges
Carlo Scarpa
Opus
Architecture in individual presentations
Carlo Scarpa
Museo Canoviano, Possagno
Carlo Scarpa
Museo Canoviano, Possagno
Text
Stefan Buzas
Judith Carmel-Arthur
Photographs
Richard Bryant
Contents
6
16
Plans
Floor plans 16 Sections 18
22
Pictorial section
The entrance to the museum 22 The arcade 23
The entrance hall 24 The Basilica 26 The entrance
to the Scarpa wing 28 The Scarpa wing 30 The
exterior of the Scarpa wing 44 The courtyard in
front of the former stables 52 The former stables 54
The garden 56 Canovas house 58
60
emerge into an open valley. Distant hills suddenly appear towards the north with the higher reaches of the
towering Dolomites in the further distance. In the picturesque greenery of the nearer foothills lies, somewhat unexpectedly, the harmonious fabric of a honeycoloured, domed temple bearing the unmistakable profile of the Roman Pantheon. Turning left from Ascolo
is the small village of Possagno, within the shadow of
Monte Grappa, mostly and sadly remembered for the
dreadful battles fought there in 1917 between Italy and
the invading armies of Austria.
Entering Possagno, mountains of stacked bricks and
clay shards betray the ancient local traditions of earthbound craftsmanship. An upper road leads to a broad
straight avenue projecting upwards as the backbone
of the Possagno hill. At its peak lies the unusual, domed
temple glimpsed earlier from the distance. This Pantheon-like structure is the Tempio Canoviano, begun
in 1819 and originally planned as the villages new parish
church, but soon chosen as the final resting place of
Possagnos most famous son. Its conception and indeed the very intervention of its Neoclassical design
into the traditional architectural character of this quiet
village were due to Canova himself.
The structure was conceived by Canova, and its
construction initiated at his own expense. Incomplete
at the time of his death in 1822, the Temple was finished in 1830 under the instruction of his half-brother
and sole heir, the Abate Giovanni Battista Sartori (1775
to 1858). The building was a monumental architectural
expression of contemporary Neoclassical design, the
late-18th-century style which Canova championed and
which his sculpture is so often quoted as embodying
in its purest sense.
Leaving the Temple, a lively flight of steps descends
to a path leading back towards the village. Across the
path is an unremarkable, white stucco-rendered house
with shuttered windows. Building forms and superbly
crafted local materials of wood, stone and terracotta
speak of the modest, domestic architectural traditions
of the Veneto. Here there is a large and arched stone
entrance and, above, a rectangular panel framed by
laurel garlands identifies this as the birthplace of Antonio Canova. An additional notice inscribed with large
Roman lettering and set between the windows announces the presence of the Gypsotheca Museo
Canoviano. Enticed through a modest, arched doorway, one enters the long arcaded passageway and inner courtyard, and from there into one of the most subtle and pleasurable museums even in this so art-filled
land.
The early history of the museum is instructive. Following Canovas death in 1822, as the sculptors sole
heir Giovanni Battista Sartori had the contents of Canovas vast studio in Rome transported to Possagno.
There Canova had also kept a studio at the family
home. Together, surviving artefacts from both locations
formed the nucleus of the present museum. They included a multitude of plaster casts, unfinished and unsold marble sculptures, modelli and sculptural sketches
fabricated of terracotta and wax, and a selection of
two-dimensional works including drawings, watercolours, and tempera paintings on black ground, in addition to working tools and personal momenti. By 1832
Sartori commissioned the architect Francesco Lazzari
to construct a museum on the familys property, adjacent to the house where Canova was born, in order to
preserve this extraordinary collection. The first plastercast gallery was thus accommodated in Lazzaris Neoclassical building completed in 1836, with its tripartite
basilica plan, imposing coffered vaults, and large clerestory windows which flood the three interior galleries
with an abundance of diffuse light. The first keeper
of the Canova collections chosen by Sartori was the
Possagno sculptor Tonin Pasino who bore Canovas
own nickname. By 1853 Sartori had also established
the predecessor of the present Canova Foundation to
which he legally bequeathed his half-brothers immovable assets.
Unfortunately, the present text is not long enough
to afford a full examination of the rich potential offered
by the collections in the Museo Canoviano. However it
is worthwhile offering some observations about the nature of those collections, thus establishing something
of a context for further comments. The first of these
observations is the often overlooked fact that the act itself of sculpting is a demanding and rigorous physical
process; one requiring great precision, strength and
manual skill. The sheer physical beauty of Canovas
work perhaps all to readily disguises the long hours of
labour and technical authority each finished work entailed. Contemporary sculptural procedures were outlined and illustrated by line drawings in the practical
handbook, Istruzione Elementare per gli Studiosi della
Scultura, published by Francesco Carradori in 1802, an
invaluable source for understanding Canovas production techniques.
smaller works, studies, modelli and sketches reflecting the unique processes of artistic invention. Other
and perhaps competing patrons commissions might
be glimpsed during execution, spurring desire to engage the masters future services for ones own pleasure and edification. The studio functioned as a sort
of showroom of past, present and potential projects,
clearly taking on an added sales factor.
It is indeed rare in the history of 18th-century sculpture that the contents of such a renowned artists studio
should survive so fully intact. It is due to the vision of
Sartori that such a resource remains available to inspire
further study not only of Canova, but also of the intricate relationships between sculpted artefacts from the
period, processes of their making and the contemporary climate of patronage. The collections at Possagno
allow rare insight into the nature of sculpture as a working profession.
But what are some further implications for the museum of Sartoris foresight and generous benefaction?
Lying at the heart of his original impulse to preserve
Canovas possessions for posterity there is the conception of a collection as a bastion against the deluge
of time.
Sartoris decision to maintain the studio artefacts intact as a group effectively rescued that store of objects
from dispersal and possible loss. The act of establishing
a permanent collection can be viewed in retrospect as
a gesture of salvation especially of vulnerable smaller
modelli and terracotta sketches from the natural ravages of time and changing tastes.
The museums collection is not a complete set in
that it does not provide a definitive catalogue raisonn,
but it is monographic that is, of Canova only. By preserving the artefacts of a single artist as a sustained
group, and by ensuring their survival under the auspices
of a Canova foundation, Sartori in effect took it upon
himself to construct how history in retrospect
would view his famous half-brother. Posterity largely
sees Canova triumphal, as he is presented to us by the
museum. As a result of the museum being what and
where it is, our perception of Canova is also totalizing.
Visiting the museum, we experience him from birth,
through life, up to the moment of his death. He is presented to us ready-ordered. But this is not necessarily
a criticism. On the contrary, in the end we are invited to
travel through the various phases of the artists life and
his career, in consequence coming to know him more
deeply, more heroically.
Antonio Canova was born in Possagno on 1 November 1757. Early important sources about him include
the first catalogue of his works by Tadini (Le sculture
e le pitture di Antonio Canova pubblicate fino a quest
anno 1795) published in Venice in 1796. Around the
time of Canovas death two further sources were published, one the exhaustive 14 volume catalogue in the
form of an opera completa by Teotochi Albrizzi
Opere di scultura e di plastica di Antonio Canova
(Pisa, 182124) and the second the biography by Paravia Notizie intorno alla vita di Antonio Canova
(Venice, 1822).
Shortly afterwards, Canovas own close friends and
associates contributed to the growing eulogies of the
artist, including two separate volumes by the Italian
historian of sculpture, Count Leopoldo Cicognara Biografia di Antonio Canova (Venice, 1823); Storia della
scultura dal suo risorgimento in Italia fino al secolo di
8
antique Wrestlers amongst the collection of the Tribuna of the Uffizi Gallery, Florence, then won for Canova
a prestigious 2nd prize at the Accademia. These were
the first indications of the great works to come, and
the type of patronage network in which Canova would
rapidly become a major player. Few artists would express themselves in such an explosion of creativity in
a succession of great commissions.
Canova went on to produce a series of important
figural commissions through the 1770s, being nominated for membership in the Accademia by 1779. His
key early works, such as the individual stone figures of
Orpheus and Eurydice (both 177577) and the marble
composition of Daedalus and Icarus (1778/79) show
exceptional maturity and the young masters rapid stylistic evolution away from a vigorous, late-Baroque
manner towards more reticent and complex compositions informed by his study of the antique. His work
also began to show a more mature play of contrasts
between Venetian naturalism and classical idealization.
As men cannot rise above their principles, so the
artists of Greece never rose above the religious and
moral sentiments of the age. Their Ideal was that of
youth, grace and beauty, thought, dignity and power.
Form consequently, as the expression of Mind, was
what they chiefly aimed at, and in this way they reached
perfection ... (Lord Lindsay, Sketches in the History
of Christian Art, 3 vols, London, 1947, I, pp. XIVXV.)
By the autumn of 1779, Canova was in Rome, intending the visit to be a study of masterpieces of the
past. His own record of his travels, and his first impressions of the city are found in his I Quaderni di Viaggio,
17791780 (Venice, 1959). He went on to visit Naples,
and the recent excavations at Herculaneum (from 1739)
and Pompeii (from 1748), as well as Paestum, Caserta
and Charles IIIs new museum for antiquities at Portici
(1750). The figurative frescoes of Pompeii became a
lasting inspiration for painterly diversions throughout his
life. But it was Rome, with its confluence of artists from
the many centres of Europe, which gave him firm understanding and true empathy with art of the classical
past.
By the late 18th century Rome was an obligatory
pilgrimage for any serious aspiring artist. This was the
city where it is hardly to be believed what is constantly being found in Rome and its surroundings, for barely a day passes without one coming across a statue,
a cameo, an engraved stone, a precious piece of marble ... (Anatole de Montaiglon, ed., Correspondance,
18 vols, Paris 18871912, VIII, p. 324.) This was the age
of the Grand Tour. Celebrated antiquities located in and
around the city had become a glowing presence in the
minds of Europes elite, educated and wealthy arbiters
of taste. What is more, knowledge of the ancients was
a kind of nourishment to contemporary culture, and
was virtually a pre-requisite for modernity in the arts.
Such knowledge was best acquired first-hand
through studying the citys famous artefacts, as Canova set himself to do. But much was also to be gained
through brushing shoulders with Romes community of
artists, connoisseurs and archaeological scholars who
themselves possessed or had access to the citys acclaimed sculpture collections. These included Canovas
subsequent associates, the British archaeologist and
art dealer Gavin Hamilton (17231798), and the British
collector Sir William Hamilton (17301803), both of
fortless transition between one figure and another absorbs the spectator, drawing the eye into the deceptive
simplicity of the figural group. In his biographical memoir of the sculptor published in 1824, Count Cicognara
observed the elegant forms and tender embraces of the
figures, and how gently a play of light animates their
surfaces.
The plaster-cast for The Three Graces now stands
superbly positioned in the Scarpa wing of the museum. Its pristine state invites the viewer to contemplate
Canovas sensual expression of Winckelmanns maxim
of noble simplicity and quiet grandeur, and to genuinely appreciate the sentiment and technical virtuosity which produced such sculptural rhythm and figural
poise, raising this superbly crafted sculpture into a masterpiece of its period.
During the course of his remarkable career, Canova had periodically journeyed to Possagno. Towards
the end of his life, suffering chronic illness, he finally returned there, devoting the last years of his life to the design and construction of the noble Neoclassical-style
Temple. Construction began under the supervision of
the architect Antonio Selva, and Canova himself laid
the foundation stone in an elaborate ceremony on
11 July 1819. Within the church there is Canovas last
major work.
A year before his death he was engaged on a large
funerary monument dedicated to the Marchese di Salza, but little could he have known that his own funerary
monument would shortly be constructed from this unfinished composition, and would shelter his own body
and that of his half-brother. Antonio Canova died on
13 October 1822. At the time of his death in 1822 no
living sculptor in Europe could command the immense
admiration, and sometimes disparagement, which Canova had received during the course of his lifetime.
Having attempted to describe the remarkable talent,
vision and knowledge of one exceptional man, it is now
necessary to try to define the rare creative gifts of another, equally exceptional man. But as much as any
true architect, because Carlo Scarpas creativity sprang
from his personal response to the subtle variables of
light and spatial interplay, no publication can satisfactorily represent the indefinable balance he was able to
achieve between dark and light, void and solid, volume
and mass. It is almost impossible to transmit such values effectively in words.
Even the finest of Scarpas compositions can only
remain pleasurable, long after, to the viewer who is intimately and subconsciously aware of Scarpas fusion
of space and the object with light. To convey the magical qualities of his work, even the mythical power of
the written word can only give some modest revelation. Richard Bryants photographs included here come
nearest to revealing Scarpas personal world of intense
beauty.
Scarpas ways of working were perhaps nearer those
of architects from past centuries. He did not require either the technical facilities or the fast-paced, professionally organised routine which we so readily associate
with architectural practice in the present day. His designs of which there remains an archive of over
18,000 drawings were largely executed during the
quiet hours of the night, while daytime was reserved
for the pleasurable activities of reading and looking, and
enjoying a constant discourse with friends and associ-
tions of craft convention, and were subsequently recognised as a seminal influence in his developing focus
upon problematic combinations of the old with the new.
These considerations were soon combined to form his
strategy for any intervention in an historic architectural
fabric.
By the end of the 1930s, Scarpa had become involved with the restoration of historic structures. Over
the following years he would gain immense critical
praise for his rejuvenation of the interiors of historic galleries and museums in Italy, his work commissioned by
various institutions concerned with not only progressive
design, but also the tourist industry. The first instance of
this type of intervention was in the ancient historic fabric of the Ca Fscari in Venice, during 1936/37, where
Scarpas endeavours provided evidence of his consummate skill in the manipulation of materials. This commission also proved Scarpas sensitivity towards designing
structure and space while prioritising the contextual importance of historic artefacts on display. He consistently
expressed special concern to retain the authenticity and
integrity of any structure. He also looked carefully at the
more abstract qualities of atmosphere and light in order
to retain the timelessness of any historic fabric in which
a collection of artefacts was present, achieving an atmospheric intimacy which evoked the past life of the
artefacts themselves and their role in the story of a surviving building.
Prior to his work at the Canoviano in Possagno,
Scarpa had also gained experience during 1953/54 in
designing the museum interior of the Palazzo Abatellis
in Palermo, and was subsequently occupied with similar
interventions at the Museo Correr in Venice in 1953 to
1960, and at the Fondazione Querini-Stampalia, also in
Venice, in 196163. In 1964 Scarpa again achieved critical recognition for his redesign at the Museo Civico di
Castelvecchio in Verona, a seminal instance in which
the institution was sited in a venerable building being
reinvented with mindful regard for its unique past.
Throughout the course of his work in the museum
and gallery sector, Scarpas interventions questioned
prevailing notions about museum design and also interrogated the time-honoured idea of galleries as otherworldly spaces secreted within venerable structures
often lacking sufficient air or natural light. Scarpas response to the redesign of such interiors simply addressed different challenges. He looked painstakingly
at the whole of a site and its available space. He interpreted artefacts themselves as the active agents to be
accommodated foremost in any exhibition building
scheme. Because Scarpa prioritised the requirements
of artefacts, his architectural choices facilitated a new,
more purely abstract approach to renovation and intervention, and this is seen perhaps above all at Possagno.
Other early considerations which informed Scarpas
eventual work at the Canova Museum were located in
his experimental approach to exhibition display. Part of
the success and magic of Possagno rests clearly on the
nature of his display solutions which drew together in
an entirely new and remarkable fashion much of the experience and expertise gained earlier. His career interrupted by the Second World War, during the late 1940s
Scarpa began a series of co-operations with the prestigious Venice Biennale, a relationship which served to
bring his work in the field of exhibition and display design to the critical attention of an international audience.
From 1948 until 1972 he acted as design consultant to
12
3. Carlo Scarpa, Galleria Nazionale della Sicilia, Palazzo Abatellis, Palermo, 1953/54. (From: Christine HohSlodczyk, Carlo Scarpa und das Museum, Berlin, 1987.)
4. Carlo Scarpa, Galleria Fondazione Querini Stampalia,
Venice, 196163. (From: Christine Hoh-Slodczyk, Carlo
Scarpa und das Museum, Berlin, 1987.)
5. Carlo Scarpa, Museo Civico di Castelvecchio, Verona,
195664. (From: Global Architecture, 51.)
6. Carlo Scarpa, Olivetti showroom, Venice, 195759.
(From: Global Architecture, 51.)
outstanding of his masterpieces in this area: the addition he built between 1955 and 1957 in Possagno for
the Gipsoteca Canoviana.
In the apparent simplicity of its design, Scarpas extension at Possagno is both deceptive and ingenious.
The existing basilica-like museum was enlarged by a
comparatively small addition. Within three distinct and
beautifully orchestrated volumes Scarpa was able to
create a composition comparable to a musical suite in
three movements, also creating a suite in luminosity. It
is difficult to describe the abundance of spatial compositions which arise wherever on looks. Suffice it to say
that these spaces leave one with a feeling of abundant
joy.
The site was originally a narrow, descending plot
stretching nearly the entire length of one of the nave
sides of the existing basilica-like museum. The site thus
presented a series of complex variables in respect to
both the terrain and the extant structure. Scarpa designed the extension as an irregular L shape, consisting of three volumes. The shortest segment of the L
is attached to the old museum, forming one roughly
rectangular gallery along with the cubic high gallery.
The longest stretch of the L is slightly offset from the
side of the museum building, running parallel to the
larger structure, downwards towards the boundary of
the site, and forming an elongated wedge-shaped
gallery. Scarpas design also includes a narrow exterior
passageway between the long wedge-shaped gallery
and the museum wall. Overall, this arrangement of new,
low-lying sequential volumes allows the mass of the
19th-century building to remain dominant and, in comparison, Scarpas addition is both precious and understated.
Although Scarpa was given complete freedom in the
development of his design, and was required to preserve nothing, his plan amounted to a radical modification of the historical site without impeding the integrity
of any of the surviving buildings. The new galleries are
effectively woven into the original fabric of the site. They
are also unobtrusively woven into the existing fabric of
the mediaeval hilltown with apparently little effort. Although in part standing free of the museum, the addition is densely packed alongside it and thereby echoes
the more traditional associative relationships between
generations of existing buildings scattered through in
the village.
In addition to the galleries, Scarpa almost imperceptibly added a new boundary wall between the site and
the adjacent street. This simple device helped to unobtrusvely join his interventions to the local built environment by echoing its own intrinsic irregularity. The wall
exemplifies the detailed considerations which Scarpa
introduced at every level of his design activity in order
to fully integrate the new within the urban landscape.
The wall also enriches the new gallery wing by articulating Scarpas interpretation of the traditional walled patio
garden as an exterior space both notionally and architecturally integrated with its environment.
Volumetric relationships within Scarpas design are
no less responsive to the problematic site. The new
wing is defined by three discrete volumes, each a small
gallery. Individually they boast complex relationships
with one another, as well as with the existing museum
building, the site and the adjacent street.
The exterior of the addition is stucco rendered masonry, with rough concrete finishing around the win-
dows and along the roof line. This quite subtle play of
dissimilar surface textures imparts the illusion of change
in the perceived scale of separate parts, especially in
the juxtaposition of the imposing wall surface with the
more delicate detailing around the edges.
The first and largest of these volumes forms a transitional, narrative space between the old and the new.
It is a slightly irregular, rectangular gallery with one angled wall, poised immediately off the old museum and
the only portion of the new Scarpa wing to be pinned
against the original structure.
This top-lit semi-shadowy first area gives a glimpse
into the formal arrangement of the lofty basilica. In its
centre, Canovas beautiful pyramidal composition representing Adonis Crowned by Venus is gently illuminated
by a golden-coloured rooflight, this soft source also bestowing an almost tactile quality to the row of female
busts. It is also possible from here to look directly into
both smaller volumes of the new L shaped wing,
and forward into the alluring distances of Italian landscape.
This is also the point where all four contrasting
spaces meet, tempting ones next direction. With a
tantalising view ahead, the second volume begins to
reveal itself. This volume is the tall cubic, or high,
gallery, renowned for its four magnificent corner skylights. To the left down two short flights of steps the
third volume comprises the long, wedge-shaped gallery which in its changing levels mirrors the capricious,
stepped fall of the natural ridge of the hill as it drops
downwards into the rural countryside. At this end of the
gallery one comes upon the full-height window that is
the one connection with the outside. Here, there is a
carefully contrived juxtaposition between architectural
structure, sky, trees and Canovas famous group of
The Three Graces.
Beyond the glazing, the basin of water reflects the
sky and supplies a shimmering light from below to
counter the strong light from the sky a memorable invention which imparts a seductive softness to the intertwining forms of The Three Graces. In this respect, if in
no other, Scarpa was a masterful manipulator of natural
light and a descendant of the great Venetian traditions
of illumination.
In its blending of old and new, the contemporary
with the historic, the first gallery is perhaps the most
symbolic. It is the key site in which Scarpa addresses
the matter of intervention. Here, along one side of the
low-ceilinged room, a former exterior wall of the older
museum building is retained and transformed by Scarpa into an exhibition wall for the Canova bas-reliefs.
Scarpa also manipulated notions of interior and exterior
by creating an invisible arcaded passageway down
the inside of the wall, alternating the height of the passage with that of the main gallery space, while employing exposed I-beams to form the rhythmic supports of
the arcade. Functionally the I-beams mimic classical
columns, but their material presence has been made
relatively transparent by an overlay of white paint. The
meaning of the arcade, however, is not located in the
notion of a passageway, but in the positioning of Canovas work along the opposite wall. For a viewer in the
gallery, the change of floor level necessitates a pause in
motion. The edge of the gallery floor becomes a viewing platform, dictating the most opportune level and
distance from which to admire Canovas work. The invisible arcade and the viewing platform are architec13
15
1. Floor plan. Key: 1 arcade, 2 entrance hall, 3 Basilica, 4 high gallery, 5 long gallery, 6 the former stables.
2. Reflected ceiling plan.
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5, 6. The Basilica.
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