Palazzo Leoni Montanari, Vicenza

Coordinates: 45°33′00″N 11°32′49″E / 45.5501°N 11.5470°E / 45.5501; 11.5470
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Palazzo Leoni Montanari is a late Baroque palace located in Contra’ San Corona number 25 in central Vicenza in the Veneto region of Italy. It now houses exhibition rooms, meeting places, and art collections owned by the bank Intesa Sanpaolo.

Facade
Interior courtyard

History

Construction was commissioned by 1678 by Giovanni Leoni Montanari, a wealthy merchant in fabrics, who aspired entry into nobility. The architects are unknown, but the Borrella firm from Vicenza, and the Lombard architect Giuseppe Marchi, are implicated in its design.

Icon of the Nativity.

The interior decoration recruited the Lombardese Paracca family as stucco workers and painters, the Tyrolese painter

Louis Dorigny; and the Bassanese sculptor Angelo Marinali
.

In 1808, the palace was bought by Count Girolamo Egidio di Velo, an amateur collector of Greek and Roman antiques. The main-floor was redecorated with stuccos and frescos in the neoclassical style. By 1908 the palace was property of a Bank. During the late 1970s, the palace underwent restoration.

The art galleries of the museum contain a select collection of Russian icons and of paintings mainly by Venetian trained artists of the 18th century such as

Gian Domenico Tiepolo.[1]

References

45°33′00″N 11°32′49″E / 45.5501°N 11.5470°E / 45.5501; 11.5470