POLLACK, Leopold - b. 1751 Wien, d. 1806 Milano - WGA

POLLACK, Leopold

(b. 1751 Wien, d. 1806 Milano)

Austrian architect, active in Italy. In Vienna, Pollack attended courses at the Academy under Josef Vinzenz Fischer. After arriving in Milan in 1775, he became a pupil of Giuseppe Piermarini with whom he also collaborated. His most famous work is the Royal Villa or Villa Belgioioso, one of Milan’s most important Neoclassical buildings. Clearly influenced by Palladianism and French trends, it has a rusticated base, a giant order of columns and is topped with a series of statues. Pollack also designed the English garden behind the mansion. His elevations are inspired by Ange-Jacques Gabriel’s Place de la Concorde although he used Ionic rather than Corinthian columns.

Pollack also collaborated with Piermarini on designing what is now the physics laboratory at the University of Pavia, completed in 1787, which includes a series of Ionic semi-columns and niches with statues of Galileo Galilei and Bonaventura Cavalieri.

Other works include the Villa Casati in Muggio and the Villa Rocca-Saporti (also known as the Rotonda) in Via Borgo Vico, Como, both completed in the 1790s, and the Villa Amalia in Erba.

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