Francesco Muttoni (January 22, 1669 – February 21, 1747) was an Italian architect, engineer, and architectural writer, mainly active near Vicenza, Italy.
_-_Architetto_Francesco_Muttoni.JPG.webp)
Palazzo Repeta, Vicenza.
Biography
He was born in Lacima, near Porlezza, on Lake Lugano, but his family moved to Vicenza in 1696, where his father worked as a bricklayer.[1][2]
In Vicenza, he was a pupil of Giovanni Battista Albanese, who in turn had trained with Vincenzo Scamozzi.
He is also known for his edition of the Architecture text of Antonio Palladio.[3] He was known to correspond closely with Lord Burlington, who build Chiswick Hall.
He died in Vicenza.
Works
Among his works, mainly in Vicenza were the following : [4]
- Palazzo della pubblica biblioteca
 - Palazzo Repeta in piazza San Lorenzo (now Bank of Italy)
 - Palazzo dei Velo in contrà Lodi
 - Palazzo dei Valmarana a S. Faustino e in Borgo Berga
 - Porticoes leading to the Basilica di Santa Maria di Monte Berico
 - Palazzo di Monte di Pieta, Vicenza (facade)[5]
 - Villa Fracanzan Piovene a Orgiano (1710)
 - Villa Da Porta La Favorita at Brendola (1714-1715)
 - Villa Valmarana Morosini ad Altavilla Vicentina (1724)[6]
 - Palazzo Trento-Valmarana (1717)[7]
 - Capella Thiene in the church of Santa Corona, Vicenza (1725)
 - Villa Valmarana ai Nani
 - Villa Loschi Zileri dal Verme
 - Villa Monza (1715) a Dueville
 - Villa Checcozzi (1717) a San Tomio di Malo
 - Villa Trento (1717–18) di Costozza
 - Villa Cerchiari (1722) a Isola Vicentina
 - Villa Capra (1728) a Santa Maria di Camisano
 - Villa Negri (1708)[8]
 - Gardens of Villa Trissino at Trissino[9]
 
References
- ↑ I disegni di Francesco Muttoni a Chatsworth. F. Barbieri, page 219.
 - ↑ MUTTONI, Francesco Encyclopedia Treccani, Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 77 (2012), article on Francesco Muttoni by Manuela Barausse.
 - ↑ Architettura di Andrea Palladio vicentino., appresso Angiolo Pasinelli, 1741.
 - ↑ Gli scrittori vicentini dei secoli decimottavo e decimonono, 2nd volume (G -R), by Sebastiano Rumor, Tipografia Emiliana, Venice, 1907 page 416.
 - ↑ Guida per Vicenza ossia Memorie storico-critico-descrittive di questa regia, by Giovan Battista Berti, page 31.
 - ↑ Art and Architecture in Italy, 1600-1750, Volume 3, by Rudolf Wittkower, Joseph Connors, Jennifer Montagu, page 111, footnote 62.
 - ↑ Venezia e il Veneto page 167.
 - ↑ Trecanni article.
 - ↑ The Italian Garden: Art, Design and Culture, by John Dixon Hunt, page 118.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.