Palazzo Gio Vincenzo Imperiale

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StatusIn use
TypePalace
Architectural styleMannerist
LocationGenoa, Italy, 8a Piazza Campetto
Palazzo Gio Vincenzo Imperiale
Façade of the Palazzo Gio Vincenzo Imperiale in Piazza Campetto 8a
Interactive map of the Palazzo Gio Vincenzo Imperiale area
General information
StatusIn use
TypePalace
Architectural styleMannerist
LocationGenoa, Italy, 8a Piazza Campetto
Coordinates44°24′33″N 8°55′54″E / 44.409028°N 8.931703°E / 44.409028; 8.931703
Current tenantsHousing/offices
Construction started1560
Completed1560
Design and construction
ArchitectsGiovan Battista Castello
Andrea Ansaldo

The Palazzo Vincenzo Imperiale is a building in Campetto at number 8a, in the area of the Soziglia Market in the historical centre of Genoa. The building was included in the list of palaces included in the Rolli di Genova. Designed and decorated in the second half of the 16th century by Giovan Battista Castello, it constitutes one of the major Mannerist creations in Liguria.

Particular of the façade

Adjacent to the disappeared Palazzo Spinola Doria and dominating almost the whole of Campetto, the palace was built around 1560 by the celebrated artist Giovan Battista Castello known as il Bergamasco for Vincenzo Imperiale, as is written on the architrave of the main portalː VINCENTIUS IMPERIALIS MICHAELIS FILIUS 1560. His son Gio Giacomo, who had it in fideicommissum, commissioned the extension towards Soziglia to a design by Andrea Ansaldo, and the construction of the rectifilo that connects it to San Lorenzo.[1]

Included from 1576 in the first list of rolls of Genoa with Vincenzo's heirs, he remained there until that of 1664. Since, in 1584, Gio Giacomo Imperiale — elected in 1617—1619 doge of the Republic of Genoa — opened the new 'imperial road' (today Scurreria la Nuova), a small part of the façade is, together with the portal, visible from Piazza San Lorenzo according to a perspective not envisaged by the Castle, which imagined a sumptuous façade to respond to a foreshortened view from below upwards.

He then bequeathed it to his son, Giovanni Vincenzo Imperiale, a famous man of letters who housed one of the city's most famous art collections, divided between the palace and the villa in Sampierdarena, known as Villa Imperiale «La Bellezza». Among the most famous pieces were the Portrait of Giovanni Vincenzo Imperiale, by Antoon van Dyck (1626), now in New York, National Gallery of Art, and the Portrait of the Marchioness Brigida Spinola Doria, second wife of Vincenzo Imperiale, by Peter Paul Rubens, now in Washington, National Gallery of Art.

The palace was damaged in the naval bombardment of 1684 and more seriously in the aerial bombardment of 1942.

Description

Notes

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