STELLA, Paolo - b. 0 Ticino, d. 1552 Praha - WGA

STELLA, Paolo

(b. 0 Ticino, d. 1552 Praha)

Italian sculptor and architect, born in Melide, Ticino, active in Bohemia. He was commissioned by Ferdinand I, King of Bohemia (Holy Roman Emperor, 1556-1564), to design the Summer Palace (Belvedere) in the formal gardens of Hradcany Castle and prepared a model of it in Genoa in 1537. The Belvedere was the most important Renaissance building of its time in Central Europe. The expressive and Mannerist traits of this building are evidence against the identification of Paolo Stella with another sculptor known as Paolo Stella Milanese, who in 1525-29 created important works in Venice and Padua.

Stella also superintended the construction of royal castles in the area around Prague; in 1545 he designed a part of the castle at Podebrady and in 1548 the west wing of the castle at Brandýs, with an arcaded ground floor. He probably also designed the first (east) wing of Florian Griesbeck von Griesbach’s palace at Nelahozeves, again with an arcaded ground floor and windows like those of the Belvedere. In 1548 he proposed a scheme for a cycle of frescoes of the rulers of Bohemia, to be created in the Vladislav Hall at Hradcany Castle (not executed); his design for the frieze with the monogram F and with the insignia of the Order of the Golden Fleece, of which Ferdinand was Grand Master, is preserved.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

Queen Anne’s Summer Palace (Belvedere) is a Renaissance building in the Royal Gardens of the Prague Castle. Dating back to the 1538-1563 period, its construction was ordered by Ferdinand I for his wife Anne of Bohemia and Hungary, though she did not live to see it completed. Constructed in Renaissance-style, it was designed by Paolo Stella, and after his death it was taken over by Bonifaz Wolmut (d. 1579).

The Belvedere was the most important Renaissance building of its time in Central Europe: with its wide arcade at ground level, the building recalls the medieval Palazzo della Ragione in Padua (1172-1219; loggias 1306), while Sebastiano Serlio’s Regole generali di architettura (1537) may have provided the pattern for the windows. The roof has a double-S profile, and the upper-floor windows alternate with niches. From May 1538 Stella led a group of Italian masons in Prague who sculpted a series of reliefs - the most extensive of their kind in Central Europe - for the Belvedere.

Paolo Stella created the bottom part of the Palace, i.e. the ground floor and arcade gallery, while Bonifaz Wolmut made the upper floor after 1550. We can see Tuscany capitals as well as reliefs, mostly with antiquity motives, one of them depicting King Ferdinand I and his wife Anne.

Throughout its history, the Summer Palace served various purposes: originally a dancing hall and gallery, under Rudolph II it was an astronomical observatory. Today it is a venue for fine art and artistic crafts exhibitions.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

Queen Anne’s Summer Palace (Belvedere) is a Renaissance building in the Royal Gardens of the Prague Castle. Dating back to the 1538-1563 period, its construction was ordered by Ferdinand I for his wife Anne of Bohemia and Hungary, though she did not live to see it completed. Constructed in Renaissance-style, it was designed by Paolo Stella, and after his death it was taken over by Bonifaz Wolmut (d. 1579).

The Belvedere was the most important Renaissance building of its time in Central Europe: with its wide arcade at ground level, the building recalls the medieval Palazzo della Ragione in Padua (1172-1219; loggias 1306), while Sebastiano Serlio’s Regole generali di architettura (1537) may have provided the pattern for the windows. The roof has a double-S profile, and the upper-floor windows alternate with niches. From May 1538 Stella led a group of Italian masons in Prague who sculpted a series of reliefs - the most extensive of their kind in Central Europe - for the Belvedere.

Paolo Stella created the bottom part of the Palace, i.e. the ground floor and arcade gallery, while Bonifaz Wolmut made the upper floor after 1550. We can see Tuscany capitals as well as reliefs, mostly with antiquity motives, one of them depicting King Ferdinand I and his wife Anne.

Throughout its history, the Summer Palace served various purposes: originally a dancing hall and gallery, under Rudolph II it was an astronomical observatory. Today it is a venue for fine art and artistic crafts exhibitions.

Exterior view
Exterior view by

Exterior view

Queen Anne’s Summer Palace (Belvedere) is a Renaissance building in the Royal Gardens of the Prague Castle. Dating back to the 1538-1563 period, its construction was ordered by Ferdinand I for his wife Anne of Bohemia and Hungary, though she did not live to see it completed. Constructed in Renaissance-style, it was designed by Paolo Stella, and after his death it was taken over by Bonifaz Wolmut (d. 1579).

The Belvedere was the most important Renaissance building of its time in Central Europe: with its wide arcade at ground level, the building recalls the medieval Palazzo della Ragione in Padua (1172-1219; loggias 1306), while Sebastiano Serlio’s Regole generali di architettura (1537) may have provided the pattern for the windows. The roof has a double-S profile, and the upper-floor windows alternate with niches. From May 1538 Stella led a group of Italian masons in Prague who sculpted a series of reliefs - the most extensive of their kind in Central Europe - for the Belvedere.

Paolo Stella created the bottom part of the Palace, i.e. the ground floor and arcade gallery, while Bonifaz Wolmut made the upper floor after 1550. We can see Tuscany capitals as well as reliefs, mostly with antiquity motives, one of them depicting King Ferdinand I and his wife Anne.

Throughout its history, the Summer Palace served various purposes: originally a dancing hall and gallery, under Rudolph II it was an astronomical observatory. Today it is a venue for fine art and artistic crafts exhibitions.

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