the museum

the museum

Torcello Museum tells the story of an island which was already a point of arrival and place of trade between the sea and hinterland as early as the1st century AD, a sort of early port for the Roman city of Altino, connected to the most important ancient road links with eastern and northern Europe: the Via Annia and the Via Claudia Augusta. Inhabited, with port and trading facilities and integrated into the economic system of the Roman Empire, Torcello expanded further during the centuries of the invasions and formation of the Roman‑Barbarian kingdoms, it offered the mainland population a safe place to live and form a larger community which reached its maximum size in the 10th century. Torcello was thus the lagoon city,before Rialto and Venice, a flourishing place dedicated to trade.

the history of the museum

The history of Torcello Museum began in 1870 when Luigi Torelli, the prefect of Venice, purchased the Palazzo del Consiglio to house archaeological artifacts found out in Torcello, in the adjacent islands and in the near mainland. In 1872 the Museum was founded with the donation of the property to the Province of Venice and the direction of the researcher Nicolò Battaglini. In 1887 Cesare Augusto Levi took his place, continuing the collection of findings discovered on the spot and the surroundings and adding others gathered during his travels, especially in Rome. In 1887 Levi bought the Palazzo dell’Archivio and after a restoration, he donated it to the provincial authorities with the archaeological collection included. On May 14th, 1889 the museum was inaugurated.

Under the direction of Luigi Conton (1909), Adolfo Callegari (1948) and Giulia Fogolari (1949) the collections were rearranged and reorganized in the two present sections: the medieval and modern section in the Palazzo del Consiglio and the archaeological section in the Palazzo dell’Archivio. In the following years, the Province of Venice – now The Metropolitan City of Venice – restored the two buildings and was responsible for the cataloguing and the scientific study of the museum heritage, in cooperation with the Ministry of Culture, The University Ca’ Foscari and the Veneto Region.

exhibition itinerary

The Museum houses two permanent sections, the Archaeological and the Medieval and Modern. The permanent displays present finds that testify to the intense trade involving the lagoon and its inhabitants starting from the Mycenaean period (2nd millennium B.C.), and gather various material from the early-Veneto, pre-Roman, Roman, Byzantine, and early medieval periods. The glorious days of the Serenissima are given ample testimony up till the 19th century.

the Archive Building and the archeological section

The Archive Building housed the archive of the island that were only transferred to the Venetian State Archives  in 1818 when the Diocese of Torcello was suppressed.

The original structure, characterized by the loggia on the ground floor and the three mullioned venetian byzantine windows on the first floor, was built in the 12th century but later underwent various partial demolitions and reconstruction.

In 1887 Cesare Augusto Levi bought and restored the building (used as stable and grain storage at the time). He conserved the façade but change everything else and put two venetian columns in to support the mezzanine.

The archeology section in this building, and unexhibited material is kept in the Loggia

The collection in the archaeological section offers a far‑reaching chronological journey illustrated by a rich panorama of objects and works embracing the Greek, Etruscan, Central Italic, Paleoveneto and Roman cultures and setting the lagoon area in the historical context of the Mediterranean basin. The display consists partly of artefacts found on Torcello,in the lagoon and on the mainland near Altino and partly of objects from other contexts, purchased on the antiques markets or coming from donations.

 

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The archaeological section, contains archaeological finds dating from the prehistoric to the Paleochristian periods, with artifacts of different origin, from the Greek, Italic, Etruscan and Roman ceramics in their varied decorative styles and manufacturing techniques to pre-historic Etruscan bronzes used as votive objects, tableware, utensils, votive and funerary figures of worship discovered in the area around Altino, brooches and mirrors for personal and ornamental use, some of which are of certain local manufacture.

The Roman finds are represented by sacred bronze statuettes, busts, heads of divinities and worshippers, animals, decorated tablets, Roman ceramics of differing types and manufacture. There are kitchen-table ware for funeral use and glasses and goblets from the UpperAdriatic; There are various types of terracotta oil lamps: circular, matrix, decorated with religious designs, private motifs, with images of circus games, animals and plants.

Council Building

The 4th century Gothic Palazzo del Consiglio (Council Building) was where Torcello’s council met, it was made up between 20 to 40 Torcello nobles (according to the period) who were register in the Golden Book.

The only remaining parts of the original structure are the external staircase, the mullioned windows, some section of the masonry and the little bell tower. The sound of the bell would gather the citizenry and company of artist on the square. There was also a clock on the tower, its mechanism is kept in storage at the museum.

The building, now no longer used for agriculture, was bought in 1870 by count Luigi Torelli (previously Prefect of Venice) to house the finds and artwork of the island and surrounding, including the mainland and the lagoon.

The restoration financed by Torelli involved the ground floor, and introduced some division in the first floor – previously made up of one room – to facilitate exhibition.

In the 1872 the building was given by Torelli to the Venetian provincial government who made it into a museum.

Today the Palazzo del Consiglio houses the Museo’s Medieval and modern section

The Mediaeval and Modern section exhibits works and documents, dating from the early centuries of the Christian era to the 19th century, as to follow the history of the island of Torcello and its relationship with the altinate area, with Byzantine culture and the city of Venice.

The exhibition follows a chrono-typological path.

 

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The Medieval and Modern Section, contains objects and documents from the first centuries of the Christian era until the 19th cent. A.D.. Stoneworks and architectural fragments dating back to the Early Middle Ages witness the Bizantine influence in the lagoon area and the progressive fitting to Western decorative patterns with their braids, wavy-designed frames, geometric interlaces with stylized flowers or more complex motifs of animals and plants.

The mosaic fragments of the 12th cent. A.D with the Head of Christ and the Angels in the Basilica of Santa Maria Assunta before the restoration of the 19th century. The golden silver Pala d’Altare of the 13th century also come from there.

The Section also contains paintings from the ruined church of Sant’Antonio at Torcello, attributed to the workshop of Paolo Caliari, known as Veronese. Of Venetian manufacture are the wooden polychrome sculpture of the half of the 15th century representing the Pietà, and Santa Fosca, whose body was buried in the church of the same name in Torcello.

The intense social life that used to be in Torcello is confirmed by documents, seals and pottery collection relating the civil and ecclesiastic life in the island.