Lorenzo Vela
Lorenzo Vela was a Swiss-Italian sculptor and ornamental decorator known for his refined decorative work in Milan and his teaching at the Accademia di Brera.
Early life and training
Vela was born in Ligornetto, the fourth of six children of Giuseppe Vela and Teresa Casanova, both farmers and innkeepers. As a child, he trained as a stonemason and marble worker, probably in Viggiù. By the late 1820s, he moved to Milan to pursue his career, following the advice of his older brother Luigi, who worked as a carpenter in the Lombard capital. Among his siblings were his brothers Giovanni Vela, a stonemason in Crema, and Vincenzo Vela, the celebrated sculptor. Vela remained unmarried and had no children.During his early training, Vela demonstrated considerable aptitude as a decorator and modeler. By working as a decorator for goldsmiths and other sculptors, he was able to finance his studies and later support his brother Vincenzo at the beginning of his career. From 1832 to 1837, he attended the schools of drawing and ornamentation at the Accademia di Brera, where he studied under Ferdinando Albertolli, Francesco Durelli, and Domenico Moglia. He achieved excellent results in decorative modeling, such that an extraordinary prize for ornamental sculpture was created specifically for him in 1835.
Career
Decorative work
Vela's remarkable technical skills in modeling and creating refined decorative elements, particularly his marble flowers carved with a naturalism unprecedented even in the greatest works of the period, made him a highly valued and well-paid collaborator for many sculptors working in Milan, especially Benedetto Cacciatori. For Cacciatori, Vela executed the ornamental sections of Gesù bambino in un canestro di fiori, which was presented at the Great Exhibition in London and the Exposition Universelle in Paris.He produced portraits and small ornamental pieces—primarily with animal subjects in a neo-eighteenth-century style marked by naturalism—which he exhibited regularly at the annual exhibitions of the Accademia di Brera. Vela also worked for clients with more independent and modern tastes, definitively moving away from neoclassical academic models. The counsel and cosmopolitan spirit of architect Giuseppe Balzaretto proved decisive for Vela's career. He collaborated with Balzaretto on several prestigious projects: first as an ornamentalist alongside his brother Vincenzo on the Adda Chapel in Arcore, then as a true associate of Balzaretto and often the painter Luigi Scrosati on the apartments of Palazzo Poldi Pezzoli, Palazzo d'Adda, and Palazzo Dugnani, public gardens, and the Ca' de Sass in Milan; the gardens and Villa Bordini at Robecco sul Naviglio; and Villa Sioli Legnani at Bussero.