The Old Dog Visits: A Mangnificent Collection of Sculptures at The Museum of Vincenzo Vela
I was astounded by the sheer size and beauty of the amazing sculptures that I was looking up at! To "find" this unbelievable treasure just 20 minutes from my home in the town of Ligornetto was an amazing experience.
It was a different era. A time when leaders and aristocrats commissioned sculptors to produce bronze statues and busts as monuments to their glory. A glory which would adorn town squares, villas and tombs.
@lellabird60 is dwarfed by the height of these plaster casts which were used to produce the bronze statues! On the left is Giuseppe Garibaldi an Italian general, politician and nationalist who played a large role in the history of Italy. On the right is Victor Emmanuel II who was the King of Sardinia from 1849 until 17 March 1861.
Here you can see a photo of the finished statue of Giuseppe Garibaldi as it sits in a town square paying him homage!
Who Was Vincenzo Vela?
Vincenzo Vela (May 3, 1820 - October 3, 1891) was a great artist and was renowned as one of the best sculptors of the mid-nineteenth century.
Vela was apprenticed to a stonemason while still a child and in about 1834 he joined his brother Lorenzo, also a sculptor, in Milan, where he continued his apprenticeship as a stonemason working on the Cathedral.
In 1835 he enrolled at the Brera Academy and he soon attracted attention at the competitions for the various disciplines. He finished his training as a sculptor in the studio of Benedetto Cacciatori (1793-1871).
In 1842 he won the Venice Academy competition and after finishing his studies in 1844, he started receiving public and private commissions. As of 1856 he was professor of sculpture at the Albertina Academy in Turin where his career prospered seeing him receive many major public commissions.
In Turin he operated three studios, one of which can be seen in this watercolor by Tetar Elven (1831-1908)
What Does Museo Vincenzo Vela Contain?
Vincenzo Vela made a fabulous gift to the Swiss federation by donating the magnificent house-museum and its fabulous collections through the will of his son Spartaco.
- There are approximately 5000 works conserved in the museum
- The collection of plaster casts is astounding both for their quality and size!
- Original plaster models of almost all his sculptural works are included in the collection!
- There are also terracotta and plaster preparatory models, drawings and about 1000 photographs!
- Also included in the collection are the paintings of Spartaco Vela, Vincenzo's son.
- The family library numbers more than 1500 volumes.
Here again @lellabird60 provides a scale to help us understand the colossal size of these pieces!
The realistic way that the gown drapes the woman on this statue is stunning!
The collection also includes many busts of prominent citizens of that era.
This life size work (3.84 meters high) depicts the dying Countess of D'Adda.
Here you can see small scale clay models that Vela used to plan his huge plaster then bronze statues!
The Villa Which Contains The Museum Was Built By Vela as His Private Home
This little bridge lead us over a brook and onto the property of the Villa.
We continued along the cyprus lined path on our way to the villa.
After coming from humble beginnings Vela's great success as an artist allowed him to build this impressive villa!
The grounds of the Villa are surrounded by gardens. On the right you can see a guest home.
What do You Think?
- Are you impressed by the size of some of these statues?
- Do you like to visit this type of museum?
- Do you think that men who had them created in their own honor were ego maniacs?
- Do you think that the era of this type of sculpture is long gone?
I hope that you enjoyed this article about our visit to the Vincenzo Vela Museum!
Until next time,
@kus-knee (The Old Dog)
Remember, if you upvote my post and leave a comment I will upvote it with some of my 40,000 plus Steem Power!
We are very lucky to have it in our neighborhood! I seen about a year ago an exposition with some of the artist that lived and worked in Ticino. Vela and others where stunning! But I never been there and we certainly have to!
Probably the people who commissioned some of the work where a litlle egomaniac, but if it wasn't for them we probably couldn't appreciate this amount of great works! That's the path a lot of great artist had to choice: peopole with a lot of money decided for them what to do. Anyway Vela could give to his statue a lot of personality!
You are right. Ego's have led to some amazing works of art!
I did miss this last time huh (grin)
been off grid lately so I have missed this indeed
wow .. that statue is humongous!
The bird looks pretty petite standing in front of it.
Thanks for the tour!
Well said . Cheers
great!
there are many great sculptors almost forgotten that left great collections.
not far from here there is the plaster casts gallery ("gipsoteca" in italian) of the works by Libero Andreotti.
and in Florence, of course, there are many museums of that kind. :)
Thanks for mentioning the other gallery. I will surely visit some more in the future. In the next day or so I will be posting the works of a modern sculptor that has a temporary exhibit in the same museum. I need your opinion on it because I didn't find it beautiful!
I'll check it ;)
Not only is the size of these sculptures amazing, so is the the detail that goes into them. I've never been to a museum that I can recall, although I'd like to go someday. And I do think the Era of this type of sculpture is long gone, unfortunately. Thanks for the post.
Yes it does seem that the era is long gone!
Those are truly magnificent sculptures. It's hard for me to imagine the bravery of an artist working in this medium - where you spend countless hours toiling over a giant sculpture, knowing one bad mistake could ruin the whole thing.
Sculpture has survived the media influx of artists - theres tons of artists in most fields, but I think anybody who sculpts is still an unusual kind of person.
I guess many artists are unusual but that is what we love about them!
absolutely! and WOW, thanks for the generous upvote :-)
You'd need to thank @blocktrades for most of that!
I am definitely impressed by the size of these statues. I am always wondered how they were able to make these beautiful and detailed statues. It is a true artform! And indeed, the people who made them had huge ego's. When I was in Rome there were a lot of statues without a head. The heads were cut off, because after the war they lost and the army who had won cut there heads off. This seems to be some sort of victory tradition. A shame of the statues..
How interesting to read about the heads being cut off!
Bello il museo Vincenzo Vela ;-) ... saluti da Steemitri... un manichino che è stato licenziato dal FoxTown :-(
FoxTown wow! Dove habiti? Ho visto il tuo blog e adesso capisco il tuo licenziamento. Voglio dedicare questo brano a te!
Hey Old Dog! Grazie per il video... I dance a lot better than these old robots!
Ho passato tanto tempo nel Mendrisiotto... and now I'm living in Giubiasco, near Bellinzona :-)
Ti dedico questa canzone :-)
Very cool!
It's truly an amazing art form...the talent here is such and the likeness so close that you wouldn't be surprised if one of these statues would suddenly come to life......we can never stop marveling at what man is capable of with great training, perseverance and mountains of patience....
It was nice to see it with you and thanks for the recommendation!
Wow, those are amazing @kus-knee! One of the things I have always loved about being back in Europe is the way we have these kinds of treasures right in our back yards... simply because the culture is so old and established.
I do like sculpture, very much. I don't necessarily think the people who commissioned the sculptures were ego maniacs... seems more likely that these were simply like "the photographs of their day," along with portrait and event paintings... as photography became more widespread, the popularity of sculpture and portrait painting faded.
Of course, these days it could be argued that the pathological taking of selfies is done by ego-maniacs, so who really knows?!?!
Hahaha. I was waiting for a comment like yours. In fact many around here those who couldn't afford a complete statue had busts made and put them at the entrance to their home.
"Of course, these days it could be argued that the pathological taking of selfies is done by ego-maniacs, so who really knows?!?!" Classic and likely true! I
imagine that the tendency to be a high frequency selfie taker is inversely proportional to our fading beauty as we age! Perhaps this will be the subject of a thesis like article!
Gasp!
I too have some questions for you:
Did you see any statue of Vincenzo Vela there?
Was he not ego-maniac like others?
Wasn't his stature qualified enough for some honour with a statue of his own?
(Vela's villa is the testimony of his stature.)
...And is @lellabird60 really a dwarf?
Will you please let us know her actual height? Hope she is not ...some Lilliputian.
P.S.:
Really loved to see this museum through your eyes (and that too without paying any entry ticket & guiding charges). Heartfelt thanks!
I really do look forward to your comments!
There were no statues of Vela but some paintings of him!
@lellabird60 stands an astonishing 5 feet 0 inches!
Here is a young Vela:
And an Old One:
About paying for a ticket to enter the museum here's a cool thing. In Switerzland whoever has a bank account with the Raiffeisen Bank can get into over 350 museums in Switzerland fro free!
WOW! You captured paintings of Vela too. These paintings too are superb. I really admire the painting of that cave like studio by Tetar Elven.
May you find time to travel to all those 350 museums and more, and blog your fascinating stories about them here! For me it would be like having my own bank account in Raiffeisen Bank. 😊
With due apologies to @lellabird60 for underestimating her true height. She is tall enough that I'm following her now.
Thank you for the wonderful tour kus-knee!
Here are my answers to your questions;
Are you impressed by the size of some of these statues? --Yes, it's astounding! Posing next to the statues really gives perspective on their massive size.
Do you like to visit this type of museum? Love to! Touring a museum housed in a beautiful historic home with gardens is my idea of a great day!
Do you think that men who had them created in their own honor were ego maniacs? I would think so!
Do you think that the era of this type of sculpture is long gone? It does seem to be. Everything is digital now!
Thanks again for sharing your tour!
I'm so happy to read your comment and to know that you would love to visit such as place!
I'm so happy to read your comment and to know that you would love to visit such as place!