Villa Croce Museum of Contemporary Art
The Villa Croce Museum of Contemporary Art is a permanent collection of Italian and international contemporary art hosted in a villa in the Carignano quarter of Genoa, northwestern Italy. The villa, donated to the city by the Croce family in 1951, is surrounded by public park with sea views, overhanging the Fiera di Genova exhibition center. It contains more than 3000 works of arts.
History
Villa Croce in its current appearance was remodeled in the neoclassical style in the 19th century for Giovanni Giacomo Croce, modifying a preexisting 17th-century villa which belonged to the Spinola family. It was donated in 1951 to the Municipality to be transformed into a museum.Opened in 1985, the Museum exhibits a permanent collection of Italian and international contemporary art, gathered by Maria Cernuschi Ghiringhelli, wife of the Italian painter and art collector Gino Ghiringhelli. From 2012, it is managed through a cooperation between public and private funds, involving the Municipality of Genoa, the Palazzo Ducale Foundation and a group of private supporters. From June 2012 to December 2017, the curator of the Museum was Ilaria Bonacossa. From January 2018, the curator of the Museum is Carlo Antonelli.
The Museum
The rooms
- Ground floor: hosts the bookstore, a conference room and a library specialized in contemporary art and open to the public.
- First floor: dedicated to temporary exhibitions.
- Second floor: contains the permanent exhibitions, including the masterpieces of renowned artists such as Osvaldo Licini, Mauro Reggiani, Mauro Radice, Lucio Fontana, Piero Manzoni, Dadamaino, Giuseppe Uncini, Vincenzo Agnetti, Ben Vautier, Philip Cornell, Flavio Favelli, Adrian Paci, Alberto Tadiello and Marta dell'Angelo. Occasionally, it also hosts temporary exhibitions.