Jacques Garcia: A Sicilian Dream: Villa Elena
Author Jacques Garcia, Text by Alain Stella,
Photographs by Bruno Ehrs
https://www.rizzoliusa.com/book/9782081513518
On the outskirts of the spectacular baroque town of
Noto, Sicily, Jacques Garcia has transformed an ancient monastery into an abode
of earthly bliss.
Celebrated
interior designer Jacques Garcia invites readers inside his private residence
in Sicily for the first time. The former monastery, rebuilt in Noto’s
characteristic golden limestone, boasts spectacular salons that have been
restored with a profusion of noble materials and techniques: colored marbles,
flamboyant stuccowork, majolica tiles, damask silks, and velvets. Time stops in
the elegant music room, decorated with embroidered silks and rococo-style
mirrors that reflect the decor to infinity; the gilded dining room is hung with
silk damask wall coverings and an eighteenth-century Murano chandelier and
furnished with Chantilly porcelain and antique Italian rococo chairs. The grand
marble salon features baroque paintings and a stunning collection of sculpture
and Sicilian furniture.
The
exquisite villa—surrounded by shaded terraces planted with towering cacti and
succulents—attests to Garcia’s love of ancient civilizations and his masterful
blending of Arabian, Norman, Renaissance, and baroque influences that converge
in Sicily’s colorful history. The domain, dotted with ancient sculptures and
reflecting pools, is graced with splendid panoramic views revealing the sea
near Syracuse, a distant folly, a restored villa nestled in an ancient olive
grove, and the decaying grandeur of a classical temple reconstructed with
ancient fragments.
About The Author
Alain
Stella has written numerous books, including Jacques Garcia: Twenty Years of
Passion, Château du Champ de Bataille; Historic Houses of Paris; and French
Wine Châteaux: Distinctive Vintages and Their Estates. Bruno Ehrs is an
award-winning Swedish photographer whose work has been published in
Vaux-le-Vicomte: A Private Invitation, Château de Villette, Villa Balbiano, A
Day at Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte, and Chaumet: Parisian Jeweler Since 1780.
Publish
Date: November 01, 2022
How Jacques Garcia restored the magnificent baroque
interiors of his house in Sicily
The renowned interior designer's renovation of this
former monastery in Noto is the subject of a new book from Flammarion, Jacques
Garcia: A Sicilian Dream: Villa Elena. In this extract the author Alain Stella
takes a look at the restored Grande Galerie, and how Garcia painstakingly
brought back its original baroque glory after the space had been destroyed in
the earthquake of 1693
20 October
2022
https://www.houseandgarden.co.uk/article/jacques-garcia-villa-elena
It is
amusing to read Dominique Vivant Denon’s account of Noto in his Travels through
Sicily and Malta. The artist, diplomat, art historian, and future director of
the Louvre Museum expresses what an aesthete enamored of classicism thought
about the rebuilt town: “It is a matter of regret here, as well as at Catania,
that so much expense, and such splendid materials as those to be found at Noto,
should have been laid out with so little judgment; and that a city almost new
should, to the disgrace of the arts, be erected in such a manner, in an age,
when there are such efforts made to study and imitate the beautiful models of
simple, elegant, and well planned architecture.” Simple, noble, et sage: a far
cry indeed from what was beginning to be called “baroque” at the time. The word
derives from the Portuguese barroco, designating a pearl of irregular shape.
For the enlightened lovers of the classical style, this extravagant,
“irregular” architecture with its profusion of contrasting decorations, was
indeed the “disgrace of the arts.”
And yet, in
the land of Michelangelo and of St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome, of the
Counter-Reformation and the Council of Trent that advocated the worship of
saints, icons, and relics, art necessarily went hand in hand with the
essentially irrational exaltation of passion and emotion; and also with a
grandeur conceived as an offering, or an attempt—not without a sense of
pathos—to get closer to heaven. With extraordinary dramatic genius, Bernini
executed the commissions of Pope Urban VIII, including the monumental canopy
over the high altar of St. Peter’s. Numerous baroque churches were being built
in Rome, as were spectacular princely palaces, not least those of popes Urban
VIII (Palazzo Barberini, the work of Bernini and his future great rival
Francesco Borromini) and Innocent X (Palazzo Pamphili, by Carlo Rainaldi).
In Sicily,
it took the earthquake of 1693 and the ensuing reconstruction for Sicilian
baroque to flourish, especially from 1730, in an even more passionate style
rich in influences that distinguished it from continental baroque. While the
island was under Austrian rule (1718–34), churches and palaces were initially
influenced by Viennese architecture, as can be seen in the Villa Palagonia in
Bagheria, near Palermo. But Sicilian architects soon broke free from Austrian
and even Roman influences and began designing buildings with exuberant
ornamentation, full of stairs, columns, balconies, stone carvings, and statues,
often in a rollicking polychrome mixture of marbles and majolica, behind curved
façades. The island’s black volcanic rock was also used to create striking
contrasts and enhance effects of light and shade. Into this decorative
kaleidoscope, Sicilian baroque sometimes introduced touches of Norman
Gothic—and also a Spanish influence during the reign of Charles III, King of
Sicily and Jerusalem from 1735 to 1759, visible in the cathedral of Catania.
Villa Elena
naturally embraced the prolific imagination of Italian baroque, which can today
be admired in the majestic Grande Galerie, large enough to serve as a ballroom,
or a throne room. When Jacques Garcia acquired the site, barns occupied this
space—probably once the monastery’s main hall. Once he had recovered the room’s
original volume, he drew inspiration for its decoration from the splendid baroque
interiors of the three great Roman palazzi that he loves above all:
Pallavicini-Rospigliosi, Doria Pamphilj, and Colonna. Setting eyes on its
painted ceiling, on the profusion of ancient busts and vases, bronzes, antique
marble door frames, tapestries, consoles, and eighteenth-century Italian
chairs, one is indeed instantly reminded of those palaces. Everything here is
reminiscent of Rome and the lavish lifestyle of its princely families.
To reinvent
this majestic décor, Garcia began by designing the ceiling structure, which was
determined by the presence of spread eagles: seventeenth-century Italian
sculptures, which he had re-cast to punctuate the highly baroque cornices and
decorative spurs edging the ceiling. The eagles are flanked by overdoors with
recessed Greco-Roman busts—as in the Casino dell’Aurora at the Palazzo
Pallavicini-Rospigliosi, whose vaulted ceiling carries Guido Reni’s famous
Aurora fresco. Other fundamental elements that determined the décor as a whole
were the three large portraits of Saint Helena dating from the seventeenth
century, by a painter in Rubens’s circle. Acquired several years ago and
recently listed as historical monuments in Italy, they hang at each end of the
room—and gave the villa its name. Why this choice? Garcia likes to imagine that
when, in the fourth century, Helena brought back a relic from the True Cross in
Jerusalem to Rome, she came through Sicily. The villa thus pays tribute to the
long journey undertaken by the mother of Emperor Constantine.
A series of
other portraits hang in the Grande Galerie: several of cardinals of the
Brancaccio family, dating from about 1700. The first, who lived in the twelfth
century, was sent by Rome to Sicily to evangelize the island that had fallen to
the Normans after the period of Arab rule. Below these portraits hang four
large seventeenth-century Flemish tapestries depicting the romance of Mark
Antony and Cleopatra. Dotted around the Grande Galerie, and sometimes moved
around on the whim of the master of the house, are a bronze Laocoön Group by
Luigi Valadier (late eighteenth century), an imposing statue of Athena from the
fifth century BCE, two magnificent seventeenth-century Sicilian altar frontals
in marble, and three cardinal’s thrones, among other pieces.
The
decoration of the fireplace is typical of the great Roman palaces, whose owners
always had one or two popes in their family; a chair for the pope was placed
before the fireplace, its back more lavishly embroidered than the front. On
each side of the fireplace hung a cushion on which to kneel before the Holy
Father, and the traditional ombrellino that was held over him. Garcia has
recreated this décor with period pieces. In front of the fireplace, he placed a
fine seventeenth-century fire screen in old silk and gilt wood, also from a
Roman palazzo, and acquired from an antique dealer in Palermo.
Many thanks for providing so much interesting reading material.
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