Art Nouveau in Turin

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Pietro Fenoglio's famous Casa Fenoglio-Lafleur, an emblem of Turin's Art Nouveau style

Art Nouveau, in Turin, spread in the early twentieth century.

This new stylistic current involved various artistic disciplines including the applied arts and, predominantly, architecture. In the specific panorama of Turin, Art Nouveau was influenced, in its major works, by the important Parisian and Belgian schools, becoming one of the greatest Italian examples of this current, so much so as to establish Turin as one of the Italian capitals of the Art Nouveau style,[1] not without also undergoing inevitable eclectic and Art Deco incursions.

Due to the success of this stylistic current and the type of buildings that arose in the first decades of the twentieth century, Turin became one of the landmarks of Italian Art Nouveau, often renamed "floral style,"[2] so much so that conspicuous architectural evidence of that period can still be perceived today.[3]

History and historical-artistic context[edit]

The transition from the 19th to the 20th century in Europe was marked by a fervent renewal of artistic expressions, strongly influenced by technical progress and the enthusiastic positivist exaltation of the important achievements of science. The evolutions of the artistic avant-garde at the end of the nineteenth century first involved the applied arts, taking on different names in different geographical areas: in the French-speaking area it took the name art nouveau, in Germany jugendstil, in Austria sezessionstil, modern style in Britain and modernismo in Spain.[4]

In Italy, and particularly in Turin, the new current initially established itself as "new art," translating the term directly from French. In the overall and varied national panorama, this new current, which later also took on the name "floral style,"[4] never consolidated into a true Italian school of reference but established itself, albeit with a slight delay compared to the major European countries, experiencing its heyday in the very first years of the twentieth century. In its first decade, in fact, one can speak of Art Nouveau, a term that eventually became more widely established in Italy and derived from the famous London warehouses of Arthur Lasenby Liberty, among the first to display and disseminate objects and prints of exotic taste that flaunted the sinuous forms typical of this new style.[5]

Building on Pietro Piffetti Street

Art Nouveau, therefore, found its greatest success in architecture, leaving posterity one of its most enduring testimonies. At the beginning of the 20th century, the upper middle class, by then definitively established as the hegemonic class of Italian society, found in Art Nouveau its own specific distinguishing element, that is, an opportunity to show its superiority and at the same time emphasize its detachment from the old aristocratic class and its neoclassical and baroque mansions,[citation needed] still strongly tied to the more conservative eclectic style that had characterized the entire 19th century.[citation needed] However, its innovative aspect was not only the opposition to neo-Gothic and eclecticism but also a greater consideration of the applied arts as an implicit strength, since Art Nouveau trusted, thanks in part to the growing development of technology, in a large-scale production of an art that in its emblematic beauty was accessible to the majority of the social fabric of the time; despite these premises, even in Turin this initial populist vocation of Art Nouveau waned; the ideal of a "socialism of beauty"[6] evolved into a rich triumph of floral motifs, threadlike ribbing, bold metal decorations of clear phytomorphic inspiration but soon became only a privilege of the wealthier social classes. This new stylistic trend was facilitated by the presence of many Italian and especially English or Swiss industrialists such as: Abegg, Bich, Caffarel, Caratsch, Kind, Krupp, Leumann, Miller, Menier, Metzger, Remmert, and Scott, who contributed to that "international breath" and to the future industrial vocation of the Piedmontese capital, and who set up new and numerous works in the Piedmontese capital precisely in the years between the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.[7]

As a result of this stylistic season, often considered "frivolous" and perhaps naively optimistic,[8] the added value of technique and industry prevailed, just as "function" prevailed over "form," but modernity soon erupted into the horrors of the Great War, which, not only symbolically, decreed the end of the Art Nouveau season.

Turin between the 19th and 20th centuries: Art Nouveau[edit]

Turin, while boasting an architectural landscape predominantly characterized by the Juvarra-esque connotation of the numerous noble palaces and Savoy residences, in the two decades between the 19th and 20th centuries allowed itself to be permeated by this new stylistic current.

The poster for the 1902 International Exhibition of Modern Decorative Art made by Leonardo Bistolfi

Initially known as "new art" or, according to Turin journalist Emilio Thovez, "floral art," this new style astonished for being so "faithfully naturalistic and in substance distinctly decorative."[9] Following the editions of the International Exhibition of Modern Decorative Art, Turin saw the growing proliferation of this new style in the predominantly architectural sphere, celebrating a kind of "renaissance of the decorative arts,"[9][10] making use of contributions from leading authors of the time such as Raimondo D'Aronco and the Turin-born Pietro Fenoglio, who made a name for himself through his fruitful activity as an engineer and who made Turin's Art Nouveau one of the most shining and coherent examples of the varied Italian architectural scene of the time.[11]

A significant contribution also came from industry, which, involved in the forefront of the renewal process in the Piedmontese capital, played the role of privileged client but also of interlocutor able to offer the technique and solid support for the benefit of those workers necessary for the full affirmation of this new current in Turin. Decisive, to cite one example, was the work of the Turin-based Impresa Porcheddu,[note 1] which, owing to the resourcefulness of its owner Giovanni Antonio Porcheddu, as early as 1895[12] was the first construction company to import and use exclusively for Italy the innovative Systéme Hennebique,[12] the first patent for the construction of "fireproof structure and floors" in reinforced concrete filed by French engineer François Hennebique.[8]

Universal Expositions and the advent of 1902[edit]

In this cohort of lively cultural agitation,Turin saw the birth of the Turin edition of the Italian General Exhibition in 1884,which led, on the wave of late Romanticism, to the construction of some neo-Gothic-inspired buildings, such as the so-called Dragon House in Corso Francia. Very different was the creation of the Medieval Village and Castle in Valentino Park, initially conceived as the Pavilion of the Piedmont-Aosta Valley Region: the choice of the historical period was undoubtedly influenced by the prevailing tastes, but it was not a matter of inventing ex novo something "in style," because all the buildings contained in the complex are a faithful reproduction, and in most cases in the original size, of something that the curious traveler of the Belle Époque could find traveling through the region.

A postcard from the 1902 International Exhibition of Modern Decorative Art showing part of the Great Vestibule (on the left) and the pavilions of France and Holland

At first such events garnered lukewarm enthusiasm, however, subsequent editions were increasingly successful seeing the gradual establishment of Art Nouveau and, giving a decisive impetus to its spread, was the more ambitious goal of 1902, with the International Exhibition of Modern Decorative Art, which, in its many styled pavilions, saw it welcome prominent foreign guests including Peter Behrens, Hendrik Petrus Berlage, Victor Horta, René Lalique, Charles Rennie Mackintosh, and Henry van de Velde[13] as well as fostering a climate that contributed to the erection of a variety of public and private buildings, thus decreeing the definitive consecration of Art Nouveau as the new dominant artistic style.[citation needed]

A further contribution was also made by the publishing industry, which in Turin counted the presence of important publishers such as Camilla & Bertolero, Crudo & Lattuada, Editrice Libraria F.lli Fiandesio & C. and the longest-lived of them all, Roux and Viarengo, all active since the late nineteenth century.[14]

The former as early as 1889 published the periodical L'architettura pratica, a specialized magazine founded by the architect Andrea Donghi and later directed by his colleague Giuseppe Momo.[14] Also published by Camilla & Bertolero was the trade magazine L'Arte Decorativa Moderna, founded in 1902 in Turin on the initiative of the Turin painter Enrico Reycend, relying on distinguished colleagues such as: Davide Calandra, Leonardo Bistolfi, Giorgio Ceragioli, and the writer Enrico Thovez.[4] Other notable periodicals were Emporium, l'Architettura Italiana, and La Casa Bella, a title later directed by Gio Ponti and which still exists today as Casabella.[15]

An original metal plaque from the Turin furniture factory F. Cesare Gandolfo

The furniture sector was also an active participant in the flourishing Art Nouveau period, an excellent field for the applied arts; although still not part of an industrial reality, it could count on competent workers and represented a highly appreciated craftsmanship. Some notable exponents are the Albano&Macario glassworks, which among its various works produced the Solferino Terrace, and the Torinese furniture factory F. Cesare Gandolfo that also produced many furnishings for cafes, restaurants and hotels, including the Albergo Rocciamelone in Usseglio for which it made the whole interior design.[16]

Turin thus lived intensely the Art Nouveau season, which, although relatively short-lived, became an important point of reference for Italy,[7] able to attract contributions from internationally prominent figures such as the Friulian architect Raimondo D'Aronco who, back from his recent realizations in Istanbul, designed the Great Vestibule for the 1902 Turin Exposition.[17][18] On the wave of the exposition's success, Turin continued to be a fertile ground for a variety of experiments, albeit very coherent and restrained, by a large group of architects and engineers such as: Eugenio Ballatore di Rosana, Giovanni Battista Benazzo, Pietro Betta, Eugenio Bonelli, Paolo Burzio, Carlo Ceppi, Camillo Dolza, Andrea Donghi, Michele Frapolli, Giuseppe Gallo, Giuseppe Gatti, Giovanni Gribodo, Quinto Grupallo, Gottardo Gussoni, Giuseppe Hendel, Giacomo Mattè Trucco, Eugenio Mollino, Giuseppe Momo, Ludovico Peracchio, Alfredo Premoli, Giovanni Reycend, Annibale Rigotti, Paolo Saccarelli, Annibale Tioli, Giovanni Tirone, Giovanni Vacchetta, Antonio Vandone di Cortemilia, Giuseppe Velati Bellini, Genesio Vivarelli; however, the most prolific figure and undisputed protagonist of Turin's Art Nouveau was Pietro Fenoglio.[19]

Fenoglio's work[edit]

Casa Fenoglio-Lafleur
The Girardi House
The "pomegranate gateway" at Argentero 4 Street.

The major protagonist of Art Nouveau in Turin was Pietro Fenoglio, whose prolific activity delivered to Turin some of the greatest Italian examples of this new style. He devoted himself for about thirteen years to the realization of more than three hundred projects including villas and palaces, some of them concentrated in the area of Corso Francia and adjacent streets, as well as a variety of industrial buildings commissioned by Turin's new ruling class; however, his contribution was not only that of an esteemed professional, he was also called upon to intervene at the political level, holding positions as a city councilor and consultant for the study of the new town plan completed in 1908.[20]

Fenoglio was also among the organizers of the 1902 and 1911 editions of the International Exhibition, but he was also active in the field of publishing, appearing among the founders and most important contributors to the magazine L'architettura italiana moderna. At the same time as his intense architectural activity, he also became part of the emerging industrial and financial bourgeoisie in Turin, enriching his skills and intensifying his influence in the construction sector; Fenoglio held the position of vice-president of the well-known Impresa Porcheddu, of the Società Anonima Cementi del Monferrato, as well as that of partner of the Accomandita Ceirano & C. and managing director of the nascent Banca Commerciale Italiana.[19]

Fenoglio's work is characterized by the skillful use of pastel hues, wall decorations alternating floral subjects with circular geometric elements, and the extensive use of litho-cement frames juxtaposed with the sometimes bold decorative elegance of iron and glass, electing them as favored materials. Among his best-known works are: the Villino Raby (1901),[note 2] the famous Villa Scott (1902),[note 3] a triumph of loggias, turrets, stained-glass windows, bay windows, and, above all, his best-known and most appreciated work: Casa Fenoglio-Lafleur (1902),[note 4] considered "the most significant example of Art Nouveau style in Italy."[19][21][22]

Other noteworthy buildings that repurposed decorative elements derived from the success of Casa Fenoglio-Lafleur are Casa Rossi-Galateri (1903) on Via Passalacqua and Casa Girardi (1904) at 54 Via Cibrario. Fenoglio's work turned out to be relatively short-lived but fruitful, and numerous other similar buildings can also be mentioned: Casa Rey (1904), Casa Boffa-Costa (1904), Casa Macciotta (1904), Casa Balbis (1905), Casa Ina[note 5] (1906), Casa Guelpa (1907), until he pushed out of Piedmont, with the realization of the Villa Magni-Rizzoli in Canzo, near Como.

Fenoglio also had as clients the nascent world of industry, which found Turin a favorable place to establish headquarters for new settlements. Among the best known are: the Fiorio Tannery (1900), the Boero Plant (1905), the Ballada Foundries (1906), the Officine Diatto automobile plant (1907), and the large building of Italy's first brewery,[20] Bosio & Caratsch, with its adjoining manor house (1907), and the Leumann Village.[23]

The Leumann Village[edit]

One of the dwellings in Leumann Village
The Leumann Village church, one of the very few in the world in the Art Nouveau style[24]

With his experience in industrial factory design, Fenoglio was also involved in the vast Leumann Village project.[note 6] It was the brainchild of an entrepreneur of Swiss origin, Napoleone Leumann, who moved his textile company's factory from Voghera to Turin, benefiting from the facilities offered by the Piedmontese capital, a remnant of the capital's disputed move first to Florence and then to Rome; in addition, the ample supply of skilled labor at reduced costs completed the process of attracting capital and entrepreneurs, including foreign ones such as Abegg, Geisser, Kind, Metzger, Menier, Remmert, and Scott, contributing to making Turin the new capital of industry. The choice fell on the vast plot of land of about 60,000 sq. m. in the countryside surrounding Collegno, at that time a small town on the outskirts of the city.[25] Also crucial in the choice of the site was the presence of irrigation canals and the proximity of the new railway, which, running along the axis of today's Corso Francia, allowed a rapid connection with Turin, nearby Rivoli but also with the Susa Valley and France through the new Fréjus tunnel.

The complex, designed between 1875 and 1907 by Pietro Fenoglio, consists of two residential areas on the side of the textile factory, which ceased operations in 2007, originally housing about a thousand people including workers, employees and their families. It still includes within it 59 cottages and houses divided into 120 dwellings,[note 7] each provided from the beginning with attached toilets and a shared garden on the ground floor. In addition to the cotton mill, dwellings, public baths, the "Wera Leumann" kindergarten and school,[note 8] Fenoglio also designed the church of St. Elizabeth:[note 9] one of the very few in the world built in Art Nouveau style, along with Otto Wagner's St. Leopold Church in Vienna.[note 10][24]

The urban planning organization, the architecture of the buildings, the social institutions and welfare services created in it made the village an organism that placed at the center of its goals a higher quality of life for the workers, both at work and in their private lives; a well-defined area in which work, family, leisure, social and welfare institutions were closely connected, forming a socially evolved and efficient environment.

Similar examples arose in the same period in Lombardy and Veneto, but the Leumann Village is perhaps the most extensive, complete and functional example, such that it has become an interesting historical, cultural and architectural landmark.[26]

Other figures of Turin's Art Nouveau[edit]

Carlo Ceppi's Bellia Palace on Pietro Micca Street, one of the very first Art Nouveau experiments in the city[27]
The Avezzano House of P. Betta
A detail of the sezessionstil of Casa Bonelli at Papacino 8 Street
The Florio House on Bertola Street at the corner of San Francesco d'Assisi Street by G. Velati Bellini
The building that housed the first workshops of Accomandita Ceirano & C., at 17 Corso Raffaello
The building that housed the first FIAT factory at 100 Corso Dante Alighieri (1904-1906), the work of Alfredo Premoli; today it is the Fiat Historical Center.
Detail of the mailbox of the letterbox at Papacino 4 Street
The buildings on Via Duchessa Jolanda

Despite the mainly Baroque connotation of the Guarini and Juvarrian school, the architectural heritage of the old Savoy capital still preserves almost intact important Art Nouveau vestiges and the presence of architecture from that period is still perceptible in some central areas of the capital such as the districts of the historic center, the Crocetta, San Salvario, the hill but with an absolute predominance in the area including the San Donato and Cit Turin districts.

The symbols of some early experiments that, from a still evidently eclectic approach so cherished by Carlo Ceppi, nonetheless hint at Art Nouveau protostyles are Palazzo Bellia (1898)[note 11] and Palazzo Priotti (1900). There Ceppi knew how to blend Baroque and eclectic stylistic features with Art Nouveau sinuosity and, in the case of Palazzo Bellia, made extensive use of bay windows, turrets and trefoil arches, making it one of the most characteristic buildings in the central Via Pietro Micca.[28][29]

A pupil of Carlo Ceppi, the prolific Pietro Fenoglio built his success on the Art Nouveau style, and his stylistic influence inspired numerous other architects, fueling a growing and fruitful competition that made Turin's Art Nouveau season noteworthy.[7][30] The antagonism of the large group of architects who worked in Turin during these years also saw different currents of the same style flourish; architect Pietro Betta, for example, differed to embrace a style more traceable to the sezessionstil and in whose studio young architects such as Domenico Soldiero Morelli and Armando Melis de Villa, protagonists of the later season of Italian Rationalism, were trained. Betta's work was distinguished by its more monumental approach, influenced by classical elements skillfully combined with secessionist stylistic features, the most notable example of which appears in the Avezzano House (1912) in the Crocetta district, where the façade is punctuated by a sequence of large projecting Corinthian columns supported by taurine protomes and "chained" to a series of bay windows.[31]

Other markedly Secessionist examples are Casa Bonelli (1904), the residence of the same architect Bonelli,[32] whose elevations are characterized by very distinctive French windows surrounded by a wide circular frame bearing a finely decorated ornamentation, and Casa Mussini, an austere residential building in the Precollina, designed by architect Ferrari in 1914.[33]

Another exponent close to Pietro Betta's design vocabulary was architect Annibale Rigotti, who, on the corner of Via Vassalli Eandi with Via Principi d'Acaja, not far from Fenoglio's Casa Ina, designed Casa Baravalle (1902), a single-family villa recognizable by its blue walls and characterized by geometric decorations, with extremely sober forms. There Rigotti, already the author of several pavilions at the 1902 International Exhibition, seems almost to anticipate the rigor that would prevail in the later Deco style.[34]

From 1902 onward, on the wave of the success of the expositions, Art Nouveau spread throughout the city, contributing to its growth. The city's concomitant industrial vocation also attracted some new labor, and the demand for housing grew to such an extent that the urban fabric expanded. With the advent of electricity and its increasing diffusion, industries proliferated and established new settlements on the outskirts of the city, permanently abandoning the San Donato district and the pre-hill area, a forced choice until the motive force was relegated to the hydraulic power of the mills and jacks that rose in the areas characterized by steep gradients.[35]

The San Salvario district, close to the Valentino Park and where the expositions of those years were held, was precisely one of the first to develop new blocks of industrial establishments and residential housing, sometimes modifying the elevations of existing buildings or requesting permission for design variations so that buildings with a "contemporary" appearance could be constructed.[36] In addition to the numerous rented dwellings in the nearby Via Pietro Giuria, Via Saluzzo, and Via Madama Cristina, Villa Javelli, the Turin home that D'Aronco designed and had built for his wife, also arose in San Salvario;[30] not far away is also the well-known Villino Kind (1906), the residence of the Swiss engineer Adolfo Kind, who became famous in Italy for having first introduced the new sport of skiing, as well as the founder of the first Italian club, the Ski Club Torino.[37]

Even the world of industry, as mentioned above, was not indifferent to the unprecedented sinuosity of the Art Nouveau style. In addition to the tanneries and breweries designed by Fenoglio in the San Donato area, the new headquarters of the Impresa Porcheddu also moved to the San Salvario district in 1903, so directly involved in the building frenzy of these decades, it occupied a low building that stood at Corso Valentino 20, that is, at the current former FIAT headquarters in Corso Marconi, which was built in the mid-1930s.[note 12] The nascent automobile industry also played the role of commissioner; one of the first workshops to make use of a new structure according to the dictates of the new current was that of Accomandita Ceirano & C., Turin's first automobile workshop producing small Welleyes-branded vehicles[38] equipped with internal-combustion engines and of which Fenoglio himself was a partner; it moved its operations in 1906 to the southern outskirts of the city, in what is now Corso Raffaello 17, in a building still easily recognizable by its access gates surrounded by large circular volutes in litho-cement.[39] FIAT itself, which was incorporated in Turin precisely in 1899, commissioned its first plant from the young architect Alfredo Premoli who, between 1904 and 1906, in Corso Dante Alighieri built the complex including the Scuola Allievi and the first factory, whose building is conspicuously framed by stylized floral motifs on the corners of the litho-cement cymaeas on the top bearing the acronym of the Turin car manufacturer.

Also significant is the Galleria dell'Industria Subalpina, a structure inspired by typical Parisian passages albeit still a relic of eclectic taste, which housed the famous Caffè Romano[note 13] and is overlooked by the elegant Caffè Baratti & Milano, renovated in 1909; its entrance from the arcades of Piazza Castello exhibits a rich marble frame embellished with bronze bas-reliefs and richly worked interiors, with extensive use of marble intarsias and stuccoes.

In the Crocetta district, on the other hand, one can admire the remarkable Casa Maffei (1905), with railings and wrought ironwork by the Lombard master Alessandro Mazzucotelli, designed by Antonio Vandone of Cortemilia; other examples of his to mention are some of the palaces on Corso Galileo Ferraris and Corso Re Umberto, characteristic for their phytomorphic decorations and extensive use of stained glass and wrought iron. However, the architect Vandone di Cortemilia also devoted himself to commercial premises: the Caffè Mulassano in central Piazza Castello, whose small size does not, however, make the elegant boiseries and mirrors, the coffered ceiling in wood and leather and the numerous bronze decorations look out of place.[40] Further works by Vandone di Cortemilia can also be found at the Monumental Cemetery, along with other works by L. Bistolfi,[note 14] D. Calandra, G. Casanova, C. Fumagalli, E. Rubino and A. Mazzucotelli.[41]

In the San Donato area, in addition to Casa Fenoglio on Via Piffetti,[note 15] there are two examples dated 1908, by Giovanni Gribodo, and not far away there are other examples of Art Nouveau buildings on Via Durandi, Via Cibrario and again on Via Piffetti, at number 35; while by Giovan Battista Benazzo are Casa Tasca (1903), which flaunts floral decorations, circular geometric motifs and rich wrought iron decorations for railings and windows.

In the neighboring Cìt Turìn district, along Via Duchessa Jolanda, stand two palaces designed by Gottardo Gussoni, clear examples of late Art Nouveau dating from 1914; similarly, the buildings in the rear of Via Susa also repeat the same layout: a central courtyard with a low building at the bottom surmounted by a crenellated turret, an element that made Gussoni's Art Nouveau style increasingly characterized by an eclecticism that would later result in a true neo-Gothic style, so much so that he became one of the favorite architects of Cav. Carrera.

Daniele Donghi and Camillo Dolza: two engineers in the service of public administration[edit]

The former Municipal Baths on O. Morgari Street

Turin's Art Nouveau season was also characterized by conspicuous construction of public buildings including schools, offices and public baths. Illustrious exponents emerged in this sector of local government, including engineer Daniele Donghi, formerly a professor of technical architecture in Milan and Padua, who for about fifteen years was head of the Technical Office of Public Works, a position he left at the turn of the similar position at the City of Padua, that of Venice, eventually becoming director of the Milan branch of the Porcheddu Company of Turin.[42]

Donghi was succeeded by engineer Camillo Dolza, who signed the most important public building projects in Turin in the early decades of the twentieth century, including the imposing building of the female high school "V. Monti" in corso Galileo Ferraris 11 (1900),[note 16] the first Municipal Baths in via G. Saccarelli (1901), those in via O. Morgari (1905), those in Borgo Vanchiglia (1910), the Poste e Telegrafi building in via Alfieri (1908) and the new elementary school "Santorre di Santarosa" in via Braccini (1920).[43]

Neo-Gothic style and the detractors of Art Nouveau[edit]

Casa della Vittoria, in Corso Francia

Parallel to the naturalism of Art Nouveau, the neo-Gothic current continued to be the preferred style of the aristocracy and patrons of a more conservative and traditionalist taste; moreover, due to the strong allegorical connotation of medieval inspiration, it confirmed itself as the preferred style for the realization of religious buildings, if we exclude the only Italian case of the Art Nouveau church dedicated to Saint Elizabeth, inside the Leumann Village.

One of the greatest detractors of Art Nouveau was the Turin poet Guido Gozzano who, ironically, lived and died in a building designed according to this new style by Pietro Fenoglio.[9][44][note 17] He often made harsh remarks about Art Nouveau, going so far as to call it a "rubella of good taste,"[45] almost likening it to a passing infatuation with European models that, according to his thinking, had no connection with the Italian architectural tradition; on the contrary, in Neo-Gothic he sensed a healthy "return to order" that sheltered from dangerous, overly daring stylistic avant-gardes.[46]

Of the same idea were also the leading members of the nobility and finance who, though without resorting to neo-Gothic, preferred a more sober, traditional and conservative neoclassical style for their representative buildings, as happened, for example, with the eclectic building of Assicurazioni Generali Venezia in Piazza Solferino, designed by Pietro Fenoglio, who nevertheless bowed there to the unquestionable requirements of the client.[46]

A view of the medieval village of Valentino Park

In addition to the well-known Borgo Medievale in the Valentino Park, the result of a careful study of local medieval remains coordinated by Portuguese architect Alfredo d'Andrade, excellent examples of civil architecture can be seen in the elegant residential neighborhood Cit Turin in the works commissioned by Carrera: the Casa della Vittoria[note 18] (1918–20) by Gottardo Gussoni, together with the home of Carrera himself,[note 19] are the most notable examples. Also noteworthy in the same neighborhood is the work of architect Giuseppe Gallo, to whom is owed the design of the church dedicated to Jesus Nazarene facing Martini Square.[note 20] Further examples of neo-Gothic style civic buildings can be highlighted in the nearby San Donato neighborhood with the group of houses on Via Piffetti,[note 21] famous for their wrought ironwork, characteristic sphinxes and peacock-tail decorations.

Other isolated examples of neo-Gothic by Giuseppe Gallo are also to be found in the San Salvario area[note 22] and in the Crocetta district, where stands the Casa Lattes (1911), an imposing example at the intersection of Via Sacchi and Corso Sommelier. In the Parella district, on the other hand, at the time the extreme suburbs surrounded by the countryside, stands Palazzotto Arduino, a rich example of neo-Gothic designed by architect Paolo Napione in 1926,[47] when by then the architectural avant-garde was already experimenting in the city with the first examples of rationalism, such as Palazzo Gualino.

The final parable of Art Nouveau, the advent of Art Deco and neoliberty[edit]

Art Deco[edit]

Construction and completion phase of the building that from 1926 housed the Cinema Palace, later Cinema Corso
Enrieu House, an early example of Deco on L. Street. Cibrario (1914)
The Rivella Towers, another art deco example (1929)
The Obelisk House (1954), at Crimea 2 Square, an example of neoliberty
Villa Grivet Brancot (2002), on San Martino street: an example of an "architectural fake"

While the horrors of the First World War marked, not only symbolically, the end of the season of Art Nouveau, during the second decade of the twentieth century the theme of "function" prevailed over "form," and art deco was a kind of stylistic synopsis that saw its sinuous boldness transformed into more rigorous stylistic features that anticipated, if only slightly, the main features of rationalism; Turin is also home to some worthy examples of this new current.

In addition to some villas on the hillside, one of the earliest expressions of art deco architecture appeared at 62 Via Cibrario, where architect Bertola's Casa Enrieu stands: its decorative apparatus, now devoid of floral decorations, is characterized by cornices and undulating motifs alternating with flat surfaces; the same is true of the building next door, on the corner with nearby Via Bossi.[48]

Another example of art deco was the building that was erected on the corner of Corso Vittorio Emanuele II, which was built in 1926 to a design by engineer Bonadè-Bottino to house the Palazzo del Cinema, later Cinema Corso, at the time the largest movie theater in Italy;[note 23] despite its destruction in a fire on March 9, 1980, the characteristic facade with angular access surmounted by a dome was preserved and the building was put to a different use, designed by architect Pier Paolo Maggiora.[29] In Piazza Solferino[note 24] stands another example with sober and elegant forms built in 1928 to a design by Giuseppe Momo, as the headquarters of the Società Anonima Edile Torinese.[49]

Another Turinese author who made a name for himself for his Deco works was architect Vittorio Eugenio Ballatore of Rosana. The author of the vaguely Art Nouveau-inspired motovelodrome and the Stadium, he distinguished himself by designing the Rivella Towers, the pair of buildings placed in the eponymous widening at the intersection of Corso Regina Margherita[note 25] and Corso Regio Parco, as well as the imposing building of the National Electrotechnical Institute "Galileo Ferraris" in Corso Massimo d'Azeglio[note 26] and a group of buildings near Piazza Bernini.

Neoliberty and the posthumous reappraisal of Turin's Art Nouveau style[edit]

In the 1950s, Art Nouveau had a sort of reinterpretation by some exponents of Turinese architecture of the time including Roberto Gabetti, Aimaro Isola, Sergio Jaretti and Elio Luzi, and likewise the Milanese studio BBPR, whose reinterpretation of floral and structural stylistic features led the critic Paolo Portoghesi to define this phenomenon as neoliberty.[50][51] The so-called Obelisk House by Jaretti and Luzi is emblematic,[52] where cultured stylistic references emerge with refined irony that lead to a reinterpretation of building materials, re-proposing the use of litho-cement for decorative elements that characterize all the sinuous elevations of the building marked by overlapping horizontal reliefs that recall Gaudí's modernist morphologies.[53]

Also in the hilly area of Borgo Po, an eccentric single-family building designed by Turin architect Alessandro Celli appeared in the early 2000s. He designed Villa Grivet Brancot for his patron in 2002, that is, an authentic "architectural fake" inspired by Turin's major Art Nouveau styles. The home of the Grivet Brancot family is characterized by a rich decorative apparatus consisting of litho-cement, cornices, decorations and wrought irons that really seem to belong to the Fenoglian repertoire but instead are the result of a careful contemporary search for workmanship and material philologically consistent with the Art Nouveau era and in perpetual homage to it.[53]

Buildings of major interest[edit]

Downtown[edit]

Building Author Year Location Note Image (exterior) Image (interior/detail)
Palazzo Bellia C. Ceppi 1892-1898 via Pietro Micca 4-6 It was the first building in Turin to be constructed by the Bellia company with reinforced concrete floors and supporting structure according to the Systéme Hennebique patent.[12]
Palazzo Priotti C. Ceppi 1900 corso Vittorio Emanuele II 52  
Magisterial female high school "V. Monti" C. Dolza
G. Scanagatta
1900 corso Galileo Ferraris 11  
Casa Reda G. Reycend 1902 via San Francesco d'Assisi 15 It was one of three "rented dwellings" commissioned by brothers Daniele and Sereno Florio.[54]
Casa Florio G. Velati Bellini 1902 via San Francesco d'Assisi 17, corner of via Bertola It was one of three "rented dwellings" commissioned by brothers Daniele and Sereno Florio.[55]
Rossi-Galateri Apartment Building P. Fenoglio 1903 via Passalacqua 14  
Casa Boffa-Costa P. Fenoglio 1903 via Papacino,

corner of via Revel

 
Casa Boffa-Costa-Magnani P. Fenoglio 1904 via de Sonnaz 16  
Casa Rey P. Fenoglio 1904 corso Galileo Ferraris 16-18  
Casa Bellia P. Fenoglio 1904 via Papacino,

corner of corso G. Matteotti

 
Residential building P. Fenoglio 1904 via Papacino 4  
Residential building G. Gatti 1904 corso Galileo Ferraris 22  
Palazzo della Zoppa C. A. Ceresa 1906 via Viotti 11
Casa Fiorio (formerly Foro Frumentario) E. Bonicelli 1906
Casa Giraudi (or Casa Besozzi) E. Bonelli 1906 corso G. Matteotti 5  
Casa Bonelli E. Bonelli 1906 via Papacino 8 It was the personal home of E. Bonelli.[56]
Casa Florio P. Fenoglio 1907 via Monte di Pietà 26,

corner of via San Francesco d'Assisi

It was one of three "rented dwellings" commissioned by brothers Daniele and Sereno Florio.[57]
Terrazza Solferino Vetreria Albano&Macario 1907 via Bertolotti 7  
Caffè Baratti & Milano 1909 Galleria Subalpina

(piazza Castello)

 
Municipal tramway garages and offices - 1899-1909 corso Regina Margherita 14  
Residential building - 1902 via G. Rossini 12  
Residential building - 1902 via G. Rossini 30  
Residential building E. Mollino 1902 via G. Matteotti 44-46  

Crocetta area[edit]

Building Author Year Location Note Image (exterior) Image (interior/detail)
Palazzo Ceriana Mayneri C. Ceppi 1884 corso Stati Uniti 27 Home of the famous Circolo della Stampa and not to be confused with the palace of the same name, also by Ceppi, located in Piazza Solferino.[58]
Casa Buzzani P. Fenoglio 1897 via Lamarmora 31,

corner of via Pastrengo

Casa Boffa-Costa P. Fenoglio 1901 via Sacchi 28,

corner of via Legnano

Casa Guelpa P. Fenoglio 1903 via Colli 2
Casa Debernardi P. Fenoglio 1903 via Colli 2,

corner of via Vela

Casa Debernardi P. Fenoglio 1904 via Magenta 55,

corner of via Morosini

Casa Perino P. Fenoglio 1904 via San Secondo 70
Public housing P. Fenoglio 1907 via Fratelli Carle,

angolo corso Galileo Ferraris

Casa Maffei A. Vandone di Cortemilia
Giovan Battista Alloati (bassorilievi)
A. Mazzucotelli
1909 corso Montevecchio 50
Casa a Crescent G. Vivarelli 1911 corso Re Umberto, 65-67
Casa Lattes G. Gallo 1911 corso Sommelier,

corner of via Sacchi

Neo-Gothic building[59]
Casa Avezzano P. Betta 1912 via Vico 2,

corner of via Massena

Casa Bologna L. Peracchio 1913 via Massena 81,

corner of via Filangieri

Residential building V. E. Ballatore di Rosana 1900 via F. Cassini 21,

corner of via C. Colombo

Residential building P. Fenoglio 1904 via Sacchi 40-42
Residential building G. Hendel 1908 corso De Gasperi 40
Residential building P. Fenoglio 1908 via Pastengo 6

corner of via Gioberti

Residential building G. Tirone 1905 via Morosini 14,

corner of via Vela

Residential building - 1900 via Cassini 65
Residential building - 1901 via Vespucci 39
Residential building - 1901 via C. Colombo 3
Residential building - 1905 corso Galileo Ferraris 83
Residential building - - corso Castefidardo 11
Residential building - - corso Castefidardo 13
Residential building - - corso Castefidardo 17
Casa Gotteland or Gotemann P. Fenoglio 1900 via San Secondo 11 One of the projects carried out by P. Fenoglio in Via San Secondo[60]

San Donato and Cit Turin area[edit]

Building Author Year Location Note Image (exterior) Image (interior/detail)
"Faà di Bruno" Institute P. Fenoglio 1891 via San Donato 31
Pavilion of Pediatrics "Maria Vittoria" Hospital P. Fenoglio 1897 via Vidua,

corner of via San Donato

Casa Padrini P. Fenoglio 1900 via L. Cibrario 9
Former Fiorio Tannery P. Fenoglio 1900 via Durandi,

corner of via San Donato

Former Municipal Baths C. Dolza 1901 via G. Saccarelli Current Casa di Quartiere in Borgo San Donato and also popularly known as the "frog house."[61]
Raby cottage P. Fenoglio
G. Gussoni
A. Mazzucotelli
1901 corso Francia 8 Current headquarters of the State Board of Dentistry.[62]
Casa Fenoglio-Lafleur P. Fenoglio 1902 via Principi d'Acaja 11,

corner of corso Francia

It was the personal home of Pietro Fenoglio and his family.[63]
Casa Pecco P. Fenoglio 1902 via L. Cibrario 12-14,

corner of via Tenivelli

Casa Florio G. Velati Bellini 1902 via L. Cibrario 22,

corner of via G. Saccarelli

Casa Tasca G. B. Benazzo 1903 via Beaumont 3
Former Metzger Brewery P. Fenoglio 1903 via San Donato 68 Recently restored, it ceased its many years of operation in 1975. It is now home to a supermarket.[64]
Former Bosio & Caratsch Brewery P. Fenoglio 1907 via Bonzanigo,

corner of via Pinelli

Bosio & Caratsch was the first Italian brewery.[20]
Casa Macciotta P. Fenoglio 1904 corso Francia 32
Casa Balbis P. Fenoglio 1900 via Balbis 1
Perosino-Gavosto apartment building P. Saccarelli 1905 via L. Cibrario 29
Casa Ina P. Fenoglio 1906 via Principi d'Acaja 20
Casa Girardi P. Fenoglio 1906 via L. Cibrario 54,

corner of via Durandi

Casa Zorzi A. Vandone di Cortemilia 1905-1909 corso Francia 19
Casa Masino P. Fenoglio
G. Gribodo
1906 via Piffetti 7
Casa Baravalle A. Rigotti 1906 via Vassalli Eandi 18,

corner of via Principi d'Acaja

Casa Azimonti P. Saccarelli 1906 via L. Cibrario 49
Residential building G. Gribodo 1908 via Piffetti, 12
Residential building G. Gribodo 1908 via Piffetti, 10
Residential building G. Gribodo 1908 via Piffetti, 3
Giordanino apartment building P. Saccarelli 1908 via L. Cibrario 32
Casa Verna G. Vivarelli 1906 via L. Cibrario 36
Casa Rama P. Fenoglio 1909 via L. Cibrario 63-65,

corner of via Peyron

The poet Guido Gozzano lived and died in this building.[44]
Casa Grometto G. Momo 1911 via L. Cibrario 26-28
Casa Marchisio A. Tioli 1914 via Piffetti 42
Residential building A. Vandone di Cortemilia 1912 via Duchessa Jolanda 19-21
Residential building G. Gussoni
A. Vivarelli
1914 via Duchessa Jolanda 17
Casa Talucchi G. Gribodo - via M. Schina 3,

corner of via Talucchi

Casa del Faro - - via Palmieri 46,

via Duchessa Jolanda

Erected by Cav. G. B. Carrera[65]
Residential building - - via Principi d’Acaja 44,

corner of via Le Chiuse

Residential building - - via Principi d’Acaja 8 Current Hotel Principi d'Acaja[66]
Residential building - - via Principi d’Acaja 12
Residential building A. Tioli - via Cibrario 58
Residential building - - via Bossi 6,

corner of via Le Chiuse

Residential building C. Sgarbi - via Bossi 4
Residential building - - via Le Chiuse 85
Residential building - - via Cibrario 31
Residential building - - via Cibrario 33 bis
Residential building - - via Cibrario 60
Casa Enrieu Bertola 1914 via Cibrario 62 Deco building[67]
Residential building - - via Saccarelli 9
Residential building - - via Le Chiuse 23
Residential building - - corso Francia 91,

corner of via Saffi

Residential building - - via Vagnone 7
Residential building - - piazza Peyron 22-24
Residential building - - via Peyron 7
Residential building L. Cantore 1911 corso Principe Oddone 27
Residential building A. E. Barberis 1913 corso Umbria 2
Residential building - - corso Regina Margherita 171
Residential building - - corso Regina Margherita 176
Residential building P. Saccarelli - corso Regina Margherita 195,

corner of via Sobrero

Residential building - 1913 corso Regina Margherita 195,

corner of via Sobrero

Residential building - 1906 corso Regina Margherita 214
Residential building - 1910 corso Regina Margherita 218 bis
Residential building - 1906 corso Regina Margherita 218
Former Pastiglie Leone factory G. Witzel 1904 corso Regina Margherita 242
Formerly Villa Caratsch P. Fenoglio 1906 corso Regina Margherita,

corner of via Bonzanigo

Casa della Vittoria G. Gussoni 1918-1920 corso Francia 23 Neo-Gothic building[68]

San Salvario and Valentino Park area[edit]

Building Author Year Location Note Image (exterior) Image (interior/detail)
Casa Bioletti P. Fenoglio 1899 via Valperga Caluso 9
Menzio apartment building A. Premoli 1900 via G. Donizetti 22 It currently houses the Eden Hotel.[69]
Residential building (canopy) - - via G. Donizetti 26
Casa Marangoni D. Donghi
L. Parocchia
1901 via Tiziano 17,

corner of via Nizza

Villa Javelli
R. D'Aronco 1904 via F. Petrarca 44 Villa built by Raimondo D'Aronco.[70]
Kind cottage M. A. Frapolli 1904 via V. Monti 48 A cottage commissioned by Swiss industrialist Adolf Kind, the first Italian skier and founder of Italy's first Ski Club.[71]
Casa Audino-Rinaldi P. Fenoglio 1905 via Madama Cristina 78,

corner of via G. Donizetti

Former FIAT plant A. Premoli 1904-1906 via corso Dante Alighieri 100,

corner of via Marocchetti and via Chiabrera

It was Fiat's first plant.[72]
Former FIAT Student Institute Headquarters G. Mattè Trucco 1906 corso Dante Alighieri 102,

corner of via Chiabrera

Former Ceirano Workshops - 1906 corso Raffaello 18
Residential building M. Bonelli 1906 via Saluzzo 83,

corner of via G. Donizetti

Residential building
(Portone del Melograno)
P. Fenoglio 1907 via G. Argentero, 4
Former Municipal Baths

San Salvario Neighborhood House

C. Dolza 1905 via O. Morgari 10
Casa Sigismondi G. Momo 1912 via Madama Cristina 5
Residential building G. Gallo 1913 via Nizza 43
Residential building P. Fenoglio - via Valperga Caluso 4 and 6
Residential building - - via G. Bidone 5
Residential building - - via Belfiore 66
Residential building P. Fenoglio - via Belfiore 67
Residential building - - via P. Giuria 25
Residential building - - via P. Giuria 38
Residential building - - via P. Giuria 40,

corner of via V. Monti

Residential building - - via Saluzzo 85
Residential building - - via Saluzzo 98
Residential building - - via Saluzzo 115
Residential building - - via Madama Cristina 65,

corner of via Valperga Caluso

Residential building P. Fenoglio - via Madama Cristina 78
Residential building - - via Madama Cristina 119
Residential building - - via U. Foscolo 7

San Paolo area[edit]

Building Author Year Location Note Image (exterior) Image (interior/detail)
"Santorre di Santarosa" School[73] C. Dolza 1901 via Braccini 70
Former plant

Diatto Anonymous Company - A. Clément[74]

P. Fenoglio 1905 via Moretta 55
Casa Bosco[75] G. Gribodo 1907 via Perosa 56
Case SCAC[76] G. Gribodo 1907 via Polonghera 47-49
Residential building A. E. Barberis 1910 via D. Di Nanni 61
Residential building - - via D. Di Nanni 63
Residential building - - via D. Di Nanni 63/a
Former Lancia plant[77] M. A. Frapolli 1919 corso Racconigi,

corner of corso Peschiera

Residential building - - corso Ferrucci 2
Residential building - - corso Ferrucci 23
Residential building - - Cantalupo private passage 26

Santa Rita area[edit]

Building Author Year Location Note Image (exterior) Image (interior/detail)
Residential building[78] - - corso Orbassano 108,

corner of via Caprera

Aurora area[edit]

Building Author Year Location Note Image (exterior) Image (interior/detail)
Residential building - - corso Regina Margherita 167
Former Officine Grandi Motori P. Fenoglio
G. Mattè Trucco
1899 via L. Damiano, via Cuneo
Case Popolari - - via L. Damiano
Former sphaeristerium Giuoco Boccie*. De Vecchi 1905 via Cigna 50,

corner of via del Fortino

*The building bears an archaism and/or error in the embossed inscription "boccie," whose current correct wording is "bocce."[79]
Former Ballada Foundries Plant P. Fenoglio 1906 via Foggia 21
Residential building P. Fenoglio - corso Brescia 5 bis
Rivella Towers E. Ballatore di Rosana - largo Rivella commonly referred to as sugar bowls[80]

North Area (Barriera di Milano)[edit]

Building Author Year Location Note Image (exterior) Image (interior/detail)
Casa Colongo A. Vandone di Cortemilia 1904 via Catania 35
Former Oreste Colongo Woolen Mill G. Momo 1908 via Cagliari 42 Current headquarters of the Torino Film Commission.[81]
Former Boero Tannery P. Fenoglio 1905 via del Ridotto 5

Northwest Area (Campidoglio and Lucento)[edit]

Building Author Year Location Note Image (exterior) Image (interior/detail)
Residential building - - via Corio,

corner of via Balme

Residential building - - via Pianezza 81/e
Villa Ponchia[82] - - via Borgaro 128

Hillside area (Borgo Po)[edit]

Building Author Year Location Note Image (exterior) Image (interior/detail)
Giuliano cottage[83] G. Gribodo 1901 via Gatti 7
Villa Scott[84] P. Fenoglio 1902 corso G. Lanza 57
Foà-Levi cottage[85] G. Velati Bellini 1904 via Bezzecca 11
Casa Pasquetti[86] Q. Grupallo 1905 via Bezzecca 12
Circolo Eridano[87] G. Velati Bellini 1911 corso Moncalieri 88
Casa Mussini E. Ferrari 1914 via Mancini 22
Residential building - - via Mancini 15
Residential building G. Gribodo 1900 via Asti 41
Residential building E. Mollino 1905 via Asti 36
Residential building - 1914 via Castelnuovo,

corner of piazza Gozzano

Obelisk House Sergio Jaretti Sodano,
Elio Luzi
1959 Crimea Square 2 Example of neoliberty[88]
Villa Grivet Brancot Alessandro Celli 2002 Val San Martino Communal Road
Residential building - - via L. Manara, 19
Residential building G.B. Benazzo 1910 corso G. Lanza 86 - 88

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Its first location was in Piazza Cavour, later it moved to Corso Valentino 20, now Corso Guglielmo Marconi, and then established branches throughout Italy. G.A. Porcheddu (1911)
  2. ^ Located at Corso Francia 8 and built in collaboration with architect Gottardo Gussoni.
  3. ^ Located in the hilly area, it was chosen by director Dario Argento as the set for the famous film Profondo rosso.
  4. ^ It was built by Fenoglio as a "house-studio," a rather widespread custom at the time: the architects Bonelli, Vandone di Cortemilia and, before them, Antonelli also did so. Later Casa Fenoglio was sold to a wealthy Frenchman named Lafleur and from then on became Casa Fenoglio-Lafleur.
  5. ^ Example of a "rent house" made for the insurance company Ina-Assitalia.
  6. ^ Original pronunciation: /ˈlɔjman/; Leumann is a surname of German origin and, as such, the diphthong eu should be pronounced oi. However, the pronunciation /ˈlɛuman/, which is much more common in local usage, has been established.
  7. ^ Long used by the City of Collegno as public housing. See B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 148–152).
  8. ^ Still used today by the City of Collegno. Some of the original furnishings still exist and were made child-friendly and inspired by the didactics of the German pedagogist Friedrich Fröbel; the kindergarten was named after the memory of little Wera Leumann, daughter of Napoleon and Amalia Leumann, who died prematurely at the age of three. See B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 154–155).
  9. ^ It was dedicated to St. Elizabeth in memory of Elizabeth Knecthlin, mother of Napoleon Leumann. See B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 155).
  10. ^ Art Nouveau was considered an inappropriate style for the creation of sacred architecture because it flaunted forms that were too frivolous, sometimes sensual and often evocative of a stereotype of femininity that was considered decadent and lascivious.
  11. ^ This was the first civil building in Turin to apply the Systéme Hennebique for the use of reinforced concrete for floors. See B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 89).
  12. ^ [...] The move to new premises, a large, low building for offices and laboratories, located at Corso Valentino 20 (today Corso Marconi n.d.r.), took place in 1903; there the company could also have a laboratory for load tests on semi-finished products.[...] See R. Nelva & B. Signorelli (1990, p. 21)
  13. ^ After World War II it was transformed into the present Roman Cinema.
  14. ^ Among his patrons of particular importance was the royal family, and some of his works were purchased by Umberto I and Victor Emmanuel III.
  15. ^ Nos. 10 and 12.
  16. ^ Though strongly eclectic.
  17. ^ The Rama House at Cibrario Street 65.
  18. ^ Also popularly known as the "house of dragons."
  19. ^ Located at Giacinto Collegno Street 44.
  20. ^ Commonly known as "Beneficial Square."
  21. ^ No. 3 and 5.
  22. ^ Residential building at Nice Street 43, on the corner of Morgari Street.
  23. ^ This information can be inferred from the photograph of the time.
  24. ^ No. 1.
  25. ^ No. 100.
  26. ^ No. 42.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Rossana Bossaglia (1997, p. 13).
  2. ^ Rossana Bossaglia (1997, p. 14).
  3. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 7–8).
  4. ^ a b c AA.VV. La Nuova enciclopedia dell'arte, Garzanti, 1997.
  5. ^ E. Rizzo & Maria Cristina Sirchia (2008, pp. 26–32).
  6. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 13–14).
  7. ^ a b c R. Nelva & B. Signorelli (1990, pp. 176–180, 301–303).
  8. ^ a b B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 14).
  9. ^ a b c B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 11).
  10. ^ AA.VV. (1898, pp. 30–32).
  11. ^ AA.VV. (1980, p. 318).
  12. ^ a b c G.A. Porcheddu (1911).
  13. ^ AA.VV. (1902).
  14. ^ a b B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 31).
  15. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 31–32).
  16. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 20).
  17. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 78).
  18. ^ G. Fahr-Becker (1999, p. 396).
  19. ^ a b c B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 152–153).
  20. ^ a b c B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 151–152).
  21. ^ M. Leva Pistoi (1969, pp. 176–180).
  22. ^ R. Nelva & B. Signorelli (1979, pp. 207–208).
  23. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 144–156).
  24. ^ a b B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 155).
  25. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 145–146).
  26. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 150).
  27. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 89).
  28. ^ P. Scarzella (1995, pp. 6–12).
  29. ^ a b B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017).
  30. ^ a b AA.VV. (1980, p. 320. Tavola: 41).
  31. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 105–106).
  32. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 95).
  33. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 43).
  34. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 141).
  35. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 39).
  36. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 66–67).
  37. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 76).
  38. ^ G. Caponetti (2013).
  39. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 67).
  40. ^ AA.VV. (1980, p. 319 - Tavola: 41).
  41. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 212–233).
  42. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 187).
  43. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 188).
  44. ^ a b B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 131).
  45. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 12).
  46. ^ a b B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 11–12).
  47. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 11–16).
  48. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 130–131).
  49. ^ AA.VV. (1980, p. 320 - Tavola: 41)
  50. ^ B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, pp. 22–23).
  51. ^ P. Portoghesi (1998).
  52. ^ B. Zevi (1979, pp. 253–259).
  53. ^ a b B. Coda N., R. Fraternali & C. L. Ostorero (2017, p. 23).
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