Giorgio Centurione Palace
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Via Lomellini, 5
There is little information about the building, which was built at the end of the 16th century probably by the architect Gaspare Corte on behalf of Giorgio Centurione, subsequently doge of the Republic of Genoa in 1621-1622. The daughter of Giorgio Centurione, Virginia (1587-1651), then married to Gaspare Grimaldi Bracelli, founder of the order of the Sisters of Our Lady of the Refuge in Monte Calvario , was sanctified by Pope John Paul II in 2003. Known as Santa Virginia Centurione In the building on Via Lomellini, Bracelli began assisting poor girls, then continued to the convent of Monte Calvario, while subsequently the congregation of women religious she founded under the protection of Emanuele Brignole , founder of the Grande Albergo dei Poveri , took the name of "brignoline".
Podesta Palace
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Via Garibaldi, 7
The fassade, designed by the Bergamasco, is enlivened by a rich stucco decoration, with winged female herms, to support the string course frame on the ground floor; ribbons and drapes holding up, on the first floor, arms trophies; wreaths and masks crowning the windows, with classical figures in oval medallions, per second. The old stucco decoration, applied for the first time in modern times by Raphael in the Vatican Lodges and prematurely imported to Genoa by his pupil Perin del Vaga in the decoration of the villa of the Prince , unfolds here for the first time on a large scale covering the whole prospectus. Its execution is attributed to the urbanite Marcello Sparzo;
Pantaleo Spinola Palace
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Via Garibaldi, 2
The “signature” of the Bergamasco family, in full Mannerist observance, can be seen in the very fine design of the portal with female herms, executed by Giacomo Ponzello and Pompeo Bianchi (1560), and in the façade, with its imaginative quadrature in fresco and stucco, similar to that of the Imperiale palace in Campetto (1555-1560) and the Lomellini palace in Strada Nuova (1563). Another obvious reference is the triforium, a curtain of three arches on the ground floor and a transparent diaphragm between the atrium and the staircase, identical to the solution chosen for the Tobia Pallavicini palace in Strada Nuova (1558), where the scenographic adjective is given by two diverging ramps. The interior is richly frescoed from the atrium to the living rooms on the second floor.
Spinola Tomaso Palace
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Salita Santa Caterina, 3
The "figure" of the Bergamasco, of full mannerist observance, can be read in the very fine and original design of the portal richly elaborated with female hermes set in a decoration with various architectural motifs, holding a broken tympanum with spiraling volutes, executed in white marble by the sculptors Giacomo Ponzello and Pompeo Bianchi ( 1560 ). What is most striking, however, of the decorative work of Bergamo, is the relief decoration of the façade , from the imaginative fresco and stucco square, similar to that in the same years executed by the Bergamasco in the Palace Gio. Vincenzo Imperiale di Campetto - built between 1555 and 1560 - and in the Palace Nicolosio Lomellini of Strada Nuova ( 1558 ).
Clemente Della Rovere Palace
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Piazza Rovere, 1
The Palace was commissioned in 1580 by Clemente Della Rovere, a Genoese aristocrat from the distinguished Della Rovere family, which counted among its members two Popes (Sixtus IV and Julius II), the Duke of Urbino Francesco Maria I and the Genoese Doge Francesco Maria della Rovere. In the arts, the family reached the peak of their influence in the 15th century, when Pope Sixtus IV Della Rovere commissioned the Sixtine Chapel, and in the 16th century, when Pope Julius II Della Rovere became known for his patronage of artists. In Genoa, the Doge Francesco Maria della Rovere was a fine collector of crystals, pottery and paintings, which he brought to the Palace, where he retired after completing his term at the head of the Genoese Government.