Villa Di Castello
Villa Di Castello
Villa Di Castello
Garden study
The fountain of Hercules and Antaeus. he divided the old walled garden into two by another wall, and carved
out a small upper terrace and a large lower terrace, connected by two ornamental stairways. The smaller
upper garden was planted with orange and lemon trees, trained to grow up the walls. It also contained, in the
center of the back wall, the entrance to the grotto, a small cave whose walls resembled a natural cavern,
richly decorated and filled with sculpture. The larger lower garden was divided into squares, like small rooms,
divided by paths and bordered by hedges and rows of cedar and olive trees, and filled with flower beds. In
the center of the terrace was a circular labyrinth of cypress trees interplanted with laurel, myrtle and roses. In
the center of the labyrinth was fountain crowned by a statue of Venus. A second, larger fountain, crowned
with a bronze statue of Hercules defeating Antaeus, was located between the labyrinth and the villa.
The citrus garden contains more than
five hundred pots of lemon and
orange trees.
Cosimo I de Medici, 19 years of age,
at the time he was building the
gardens of Villa di Castello (Jacopo
Pontormo, c. 1538)
The garden was filled with The villa and gardens seen from the
statuary associating the virtues upper garden. The garden plan was
of ancient Rome with the power based on harmony and order, the
and virtue of the ruler of Climbing through the garden, visitors saw busts of the principles upon which Cosimo planned
Medici dynasty in Roman costume. to rule Florence.
Florence.
Geometric
Pattern
▪ The layout of 16 compartmentalized
geometric parterres of European
Box Hedge is a demonstration of
perfect control that man has with
space and with nature.
▪ The terracing of the garden
maximizes views over Florence, a
well-established precedent of
Renaissance gardens, whilst also
providing very efficient hydraulic
irrigation systems and the birth of
'giochi d'acqua' (engineered water
features) designed to entertain
guests with water play in
surrounding Grottos.
FUNCTIONS
1. were largely designed for
contemplation and pleasure
2. also used gardens to display
political power
3. in the case of Villa di
Castello - Cosimo de Medici's
glorious power and order
newly reigning over Florence
The garden was designed to deliver a clear political message. The fountain of
Hercules and Antaeus showed how Cosimo, like Hercules, had defeated his
enemies by wisdom, rather than just brute strength. The fountain of Venus was a
tribute to Venus, one of the symbols of Florence. “Venus had ruled over the isles
of the Hesperides”, Tribolo signified this message with statuary throughout the
garden. The stairways were decorated with busts of the earlier Medici rulers, in
Roman costumes. The other statues around the gardens represented the four
seasons, and the virtues of the House of Medici: justice, compassion, valor,
nobility, wisdom, and liberality.
of the animals
embedded with stones, mosaic and seashells
‐ three chambers around the grotto
‐ groups of birds and animals, made of multicolor bronze and marble
‐ The grotto also contained a water feature; the gate could be closed, and, with
the turn of a key, visitors to the grotto were soaked with fine jets of water from
a hidden pipes and nozzles.
The entrance to the The central chamber of the The right chamber of The left chamber of the The ceiling of the grotto.
grotto, against the grotto, with a unicorn. The the grotto of the grotto.
back wall of the original grotto featured a statue animals.
garden. of Orpheus with his lyre in the
center; the animals were listening
to his music.
The Villa
A five hundred meter avenue
lined with trees leads to the
front door of the Villa.