Villa Bardini
Villa Bardini, situated inside the age-old Bardini
Garden, has been re-opened after a recent restoration
which has returned it to its original splendour thanks to
the contribution of the
Ente
Cassa di Risparmio. On the occasion of this
exhibition dedicated to Vincenzo Cabianca, a
Veronese painter considered one of the fathers of
the innovative Tuscan current of the Macchiaioli,
the Villa, after being neglected for almost half a
century, is being inaugurated as an exhibition
space.
The villa was probably built around 1641 by the
architect Gherardo Silvani (1579-1675) for Giovan
Francesco Manadori (1577-1656) on a pre-existing medieval
construction. Because of its striking panoramic location,
it was given the name of Villa di Belvedere. This
building resembles the so-called "Casini di Delizia",
popular in Florence between the end of the 16th and the
first half of the 17th centuries, which were created for
the pleasure of rich gentlemen and surrounded by
cultivations having not only a productive but also an
ornamental purpose.
Afterwards Villa di Belvedere first belonged to the
Cambiagi family and then, in the early 19th century, to
Luigi Le Blanc and his son Giacomo; in 1839, following
the reunification of the whole estate, it passed into the
hands of the Mozzi family, to finally become, after 1880,
together with the whole complex, the property of the Von
Carolath Beuthen family, until in 1913 it passed to
Stefano Bardini. The Bardinis lived there for years and
now, after a long and complicated bureaucratic and
administrative procedures following the death of Ugo,
Stefano Bardini’s son in 1965 and after a long and
meticulous restoration, it has been eventually opened to
the public.
More infos about the villa and the Bardini garden can be
found at the
Fondazione
Parchi Monumentali Bardini-Peyron website