:Palazzo Pesaro Orfei

{{use dmy dates|date=September 2018}}

{{use list-defined references|date=September 2018}}

{{Use British English|date=September 2018}}

{{short description|Historic palace in Venice, Italy}}

{{Infobox building

| name = Palazzo Pesaro Orfei

| native_name =

| image = File:Palazzo Fortuny, già Pesaro Orfei.jpg

| alt = Brick building with stone balconies and columns

| caption = Façade of the palace on Campo San Beneto

| former_names =

| alternate_names = {{ubl|Palazzo Pesaro degli Orfei{{r|mar|page=494}}|Palazzo Fortuny}}

| map_type =

| map_alt =

| map_caption =

| building_type =

| architectural_style = Venetian Gothic

| location = Campo San Beneto, Venice

| client =

| owner =

| current_tenants = Museo Fortuny

| landlord =

| location_country = Italy

| coordinates = {{coord|45.4354|12.3322|display=inline, title}}

| altitude =

| start_date =

| completion_date =

| demolition_date =

| architect =

| website =

| references =

}}

File:Venezia - Palazzo Fortuny 07.JPG of the Pesaro family]]

The Palazzo Pesaro Orfei or Palazzo Pesaro degli Orfei is a historic palace in Venice, in northern Italy. It was built by the Pesaro family in the fifteenth century in Venetian Gothic style.{{r|trecc}} From 1902 it was the home of Mariano Fortuny and his wife Henriette Negrin.{{r|asb|page=49}} It now houses the Museo Fortuny, and may also be called Palazzo Fortuny.

History

The palace is in the sestiere of San Marco, in the centre of the city, and lies between the Campo San Beneto and the Rio di Ca' Michiel. It has a façade onto each, while the northern façade is on the Calle Pesaro.{{r|asb|page=49|mar|page2=494}}

It was built in the fifteenth century by Benedetto Pesaro, member of the prominent {{ill|Pesaro family|it|Pesaro (famiglia)}}, and is one of several palaces of that family in the city.{{r|trecc|muve}}{{efn|name= a}} The San Beneto branch of the family died out towards the end of the seventeenth century, and from about 1720 the palace was let to various tenants, among them a printer – the Tipografia Albrizzi – and two musical associations, first the Accademia degli Orfei from 1786 and then, from 1835, the Società Apollinea.{{r|muve|gian|page2=189}} For most of the nineteenth century the building was subdivided and let to various artisans. By the time Mariano Fortuny established his first Venetian studio there, in the last years of the century, there were some 350 tenants.{{r|asb|page=49|muve|al|page3=6}} He gradually bought up space, demolishing the later dividing walls and restoring the rooms bit by bit to their earlier form; in 1902 he made it his home.{{r|asb|page=49}} In 1907, together with his future wife Henriette Negrin, he established a small workshop; within a few years, two floors of the palace were devoted to the printing of silk and velvet clothing and textiles.{{r|muve}}

Fortuny died in 1949, and in 1956 the palace was gifted to the comune of Venice; the comune took full possession only in 1965, after the death of Fortuny's widow Henriette. The Museo Fortuny was opened in 1975.{{r|muve|al|page2=6}}

Notes

{{Notelist | refs=

{{efn|name = a |Others include Ca' Pesaro, Palazzo Pesaro Papafava, Palazzo Ravà, and probably the Fondaco dei Turchi.{{r|trecc}}}}

}}

References

{{reflist|refs=

Alessandro Maggiore, Walter Hartsarich, Daniela Ferretti (2013). [https://issuu.com/tomomot/docs/la_facciata_di_palazzo_fortuny La facciata di Palazzo Fortuny – Racconto di un restauro] (in Italian). Venice: Comune di Venezia; Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia; Sovrintendenza per i Beni Architettonici e Paesaggistici di Venezia e Laguna.

A.S. Byatt (2016). [https://books.google.com/books?id=MphFDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA49 Peacock & Vine: Fortuny and Morris in life and at work]. London: Chatto & Windus. {{isbn|9781784740801}}.

Gianjacopo Fontana (1967). [https://books.google.com/books?id=zphJAQAAIAAJ Venezia monumentale: I palazzi] (in Italian). Venezia: Filippi.

Marcello Brusegan (2005). [https://books.google.com/books?id=wahIAQAAIAAJ La grande guida dei monumenti di Venezia: storia, arte, segreti, leggende, curiosità] (in Italian). Roma: Newton & Compton. {{isbn|9788854104754}}.

[http://fortuny.visitmuve.it/it/il-museo/sede/la-sede-e-la-storia/ Palazzo Fortuny: Museo: La sede e la storia] (in Italian). Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia. Accessed September 2018.

Mario Brunetti (1935). [http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/pesaro_res-7cfcb65a-8bb5-11dc-8e9d-0016357eee51_%28Enciclopedia-Italiana%29/ Pesaro] (in Italian). Enciclopedia Italiana. Roma: Istituto dell’Enciclopedia Italiana. Accessed September 2018.

}}

Category:15th-century establishments in the Republic of Venice

Category:Pesaro family

Category:Gothic architecture in Venice

Pesaro Orfei