Two Parts Italy

Exploring Italy, travel, and living a flavorful life

  • Blog
  • About This Blog
  • Start Here
  • Recent Posts
  • Subscribe

Brenta Canal Part Three: Villa Widmann

July 22, 2024 by Joanne Bartram in #italytravel, #padova, #padua, Italian art architecture, Italy travel, Padova, Padua, Venezia, Venice

 After visiting Villa Pisani, the largest and most grand of the “Brenta Riviera” villas included on a recent day-long trip along the Brenta Canal, we reboarded our burchiello to continue the journey towards the Venetian Lagoon.  After passing through the Dolo and the Mira locks, the next stop was the town of Mira, mid-way between Padua and Venice. There, we paid a visit to an 18th century gem, the Villa Widmann.

IMG_5194.JPG
IMG_5193.JPG

 (Above, frescoes at Villa Widmann, artist unknown)

Villa Widmann is much smaller than Villa Pisani, but every bit as glamorous.  The size and style of the home evolved from the early 1700’s when it was built by the Serimann family of Venice to the mid-1700’s when the Widmann family purchased it.  Over time, the villa had a series of owners, a fact reflected in its complete name - the Villa Widmann-Rezzonico Foscari.  Eventually ownership returned to a later generation of Widmanns who owned the villa until 1970.  Today, it belongs to the City of Venice. The villa is open for tours, events, and exhibits. And, fortunately, it was included on our Brenta Canal day cruise.

The villa is sumptuous.  Like the larger villa Pisani, the house wraps around a frescoed ballroom with a large and ornate balcony overhead.  The huge venetian glass chandeliers that light the ballroom are impressive works of art. 

 Heading upstairs, we found elegant bedrooms, sitting rooms, and en-suite bathrooms. 

The upper floor also held the entry to the lofty balcony above the ballroom.  Stepping out onto the balcony provided a wonderful birds-eye view of the frescoes overhead, the chandeliers, and ornately decorated ballroom below. 

Looking down into the ballroom from the balcony above. This is the view the musicians would have had when the entertained the guests.

The barchessa, an outdoor service building which would have housed kitchens, stables, and storage, is a long building behind a series of graceful arches.  Peek inside to see the old carriages and saddles in the stable

IMG_5211.JPG
IMG_5212.JPG
IMG_5210.JPG

  The villa is elaborate and yet somehow the scale is cozy.  It’s easy to imagine a life here - from family dinners to card games to fancy balls.

IMG_5195.jpeg
IMG_5185.jpeg
IMG_5186.jpeg

After a lunch break, we were on our way to the Villa Foscari, the closest to Venice of the three villas visited on this canal cruise and the only one by the architect Andrea Palladio.   More on that in a future post!

The gardens are filled with statues, a large greenhouse, and lots of leafy trees

 

 

 

 

July 22, 2024 /Joanne Bartram
Brenta Canal cruise, Brenta Canal Villas, Villa Widmann
#italytravel, #padova, #padua, Italian art architecture, Italy travel, Padova, Padua, Venezia, Venice

The gardens at Villa Pisani. This view is from inside the villa looking across the reflecting pool to the stables.

Brenta Canal Part Two: The Villa Pisani

June 10, 2024 by Joanne Bartram in #italiangardens, #padova, #padua, Italian art architecture, Italian gardens, Italy travel, Venezia, Venice

The Villas along the Brenta Canal were built between the 16th and 18th century.  Some were built for agriculture and commerce but many as summer getaways for rich and powerful Venetians.  They lined the canal between Venice and the city of Padova, forming an extension of Venice that became known as the “Brenta Riviera”. 

A beautifully decorated hallway in Villa Pisani

The front entrance to Villa Pisani

The villas were designed to impress.  Their ornate trimmings, art filled halls, grand ballrooms, and sweeping gardens played host to Doges, Popes, Kings, Emperors, artists and wealthy merchants during the height of the Venetian Empire.   After the fall of Venice, in 1797, with the arrival of Napoleon, many of the villas changed hands, often due to the financial problems of the owners. 

Today some villas are in disrepair (imagine the costs of upkeep!), some are abandoned, some have been converted into museums, restaurants or hotels. Others are privately owned. A few of the most spectacular ones are open to the public.

The villas can easily be visited by car, but a more elegant (though much slower) way to tour the villas is to arrive by burchiello – a modern version of the historic boats that once moved people and goods along the canal. That is exactly what a group of friends and I did recently.  The boat trip from Padua to Venice took about 9 hours, with stops at 3 villas along the way.  The visits included a guide who shared the history of each villa, details about the art and architecture, and some good 16th – 18th century gossip about villa life.

The first villa on the itinerary was Villa Pisani.  Built to celebrate the election of Alvise Pisani as the 114th Doge of Venice, the villa is the crown jewel of the Brenta Riviera.  The Pisani family owned the villa until it was sold to Napoleon in 1808.  

The villa is remarkable in many ways.  First, its size.  The place is massive!  The 144 rooms are said to represent the number of Venetian Doges up to Pisani.  One room is filled with wall mounted sculptures of the head of each doge.  Look carefully on the wall to the right to find the likeness of Alvise Pisani.   

IMG_7633.jpeg
IMG_7631.jpeg
IMG_7632.jpeg

The Pisani’s must have loved to entertain, because their ballroom is nothing short of spectacular.  The room shimmers with gold trimmings.  High above is an ornate balcony which rings the room – a place for the musicians to play.  And the ceiling! The ceiling fresco is by Tiepolo and it is a marvel. The ballroom is the truly the elegant heart of the villa. Standing here you can almost hear the music playing and can imagine the finely clothed Venetians enjoy a luxurious party.

IMG_7585.jpeg
IMG_7586.jpeg
IMG_7653.jpeg

The visit to the villa includes the piano nobile where a series of rooms are filled with history.  There is the bedroom where King Vittorio Emanuele II slept (left below).  Next door, the room of his second wife, the Contessa di Mirafiori, with a reproduction of one of her dresses (right).

IMG_7594.jpeg
IMG_7603.jpeg

 

The room dedicated to music and the elegant sala di pranzo (dining room) face out onto the immaculate grounds and the stable (shown below at the end of the reflecting pool and looking very much like another villa).

IMG_7609.jpeg
IMG_7622.jpeg
IMG_7627.jpeg
IMG_7616.jpeg

Napoleon only spent one night here, but he left the villa in the hands of his stepson, Eugene de Beauharnais, Viceroy of Italy.  The Viceroy lived there with his wife, adding fireplaces for heating (most of the Brenta Villas were not heated as they were intended to be summer homes), and creating a chapel, a study and a games room.  The study is where a later historic meeting between Mussolini and Hitler took place prior to World War II.

IMG_7639.jpeg
IMG_7635.jpeg
IMG_7646.jpeg
IMG_7647.jpeg

A peak at the grounds outside the villa. I’ll need a return visit to explore the gardens!

The grounds are equally impressive.  The 30 acres contain a large reflecting pool, stables, an orangery, ice house, and a labyrinth.

Is it true that Napoleon got lost in the labyrinth?  It is said that he did but, to use the Italian phrase, chissà (who knows)?  

The only drawback to our guided visit is that we did not have any time in the gardens.  I will need to go back and wander those beautiful spaces.

Today the Villa and surrounding park is a National Museum.  

The Villa is open from 31 March to 30 September this year, 9 am – 8pm (last admission 1 hour before closing), closed on Mondays.  The labyrinth is currently closed for restoration.

 Coming soon – Part 3, Villa Widmann

 Website: villapisani.beniculturali.it

Email: info@museovillapisani.it

Cost €12 villa + park, €6 park only

June 10, 2024 /Joanne Bartram
Villa Pisani, Brenta Canal Villas, Brenta Canal cruise, burchiello
#italiangardens, #padova, #padua, Italian art architecture, Italian gardens, Italy travel, Venezia, Venice

Powered by Squarespace