The Garden of the Monsters !!!!!
I
n sixteenth century Italy the nobility would often leave testimony of
their greatness through the form of religious art. Not so Pier
Francesco Orsini. He wanted to be remembered in an entirely different
way – through his Park of the Monsters. He did not want his monuments to
please – he wanted them to astonish.
Tucked away in Bomarzo almost seventy kilometers from Rome, the gardens
are located in a section of woodland near to the bottom of the valley in
which the Orsini family castle was built. Here, after a career as a
mercenary, the latest of the Orsini line settled in to a life of
middle-aged Epicureanism. The park is perhaps holds a mirror to his
imagination (or even state of mind) after a lifetime of political and
social turmoil.
The park’s natural vegetation is left to its own devices and the
sculptures can be found at varied intervals so that the curious visitor,
holding their breath, is never quite sure what is going to be round the
next corner. Some of the sculptures were carved directly on to the
bedrock – this area of Northern Lazio is renowned for its rocky, mostly
barren landscape.
Pier Francesco Orsini who was also referred to as Vicino lived between
1528 and 1588, although a mercenary and no doubt as ruthless as the next
man in renaissance Italy, was devoted to his wife. Devastated when she
died he put his energies in to creating the gardens. To help he had
Pirro Lugorio who was a popular architect at the time.
The monsters seem to have no connection with each other in terms of
mythology or time frame and there is also no rationality around their
positioning. Used as we are to parkland having a more formal layout
this only increases the surprise that each one presents when it appears.
An inscription on an obelisk says that the area is sol per sfogare il Core
("just to set the heart free") and perhaps Vicino had his wife’s nature
in mind when he made the garden of monsters. Perhaps it was created in
this way as a silent reply or even rebuke to the perfectly symmetrical
Renaissance gardens that were created during his lifetime – a number in
the vicinity of his garden.
While we may not consider some of the sculptures to be monsters, per se,
the time of construction must be taken in to account when it comes to
the name. Pegasus, Poseidon and Proteus are all present in the garden.
A huge elephant crushes a Roman soldier in a re-enactment of Hannibal’s
journey over the Alps. Cerberus raises his shaggy head while giants
shred their enemies to pieces. Pegasus rises from a fountain and a
Triton watches over it all rather wearily.
One can only imagine the suspicion with which this garden may have been viewed in the sixteenth century - and even later.
It is certainly a triumph of individuality over conformity, that is for
sure. Unusually for the time there is a distinct lack of Christian
allegorical sculpture within the park and that is, scholars suggest,
tantamount to a rejection of the religion. Perhaps Vicino's grief for
the untimely death of his wife led to this. Authors have speculated on
the real reasons for the construction of The Park of the Monsters for hundreds of years.
A final surprise awaits in this Garden of the Monsters. The house which borders it has, like another building in Italy a little more famous, come over the centuries to lean.
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