The Chapel of Sant’Aquilino Returns to its Former Glory
Programme: Mon - Fri 8.30 am - 6.30 pm I Sat - Sun 9 am - 7 pm
Tickets: Free admission
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Location: Basilica di San Lorenzo Maggiore
Adresse: Corso di Porta Ticinese 35
“One of the most beautiful churches in the world” - that is how the writers of the Middle Ages saw the Basilica di San Lorenzo Maggiore, extraordinary witness to the years in which Milan was the capital of the western Roman Empire. We’re accustomed to seeing it from outside, walking through its columns which have become emblematic of the city’s nightlife and, yet, San Lorenzo holds a surprising treasure - the Sant’Aquilino Chapel, having just undergone a complex series of renovations. Architecture, murals and precious mosaics, all compelling witnesses to paleo-Christian Roman Milan. The origins of the Chapel pre-date those of the Basilica, born as an imperial mausoleum, probably thanks to Queen Galla Placidia, it was then dedicated to San Genesio and, then, to the priest and Martyr Sant’Aquilino, whose remains are still held there in a silver and quartz urn. Originally octagonal in structure, broken up by niches, with frescoes in the apse and the stucchi of the dome, visiting the Chapel is like traveling back in time. However, nothing compares to the splendour of the mosaics which originally almost entirely covered the walls with depictions of Celestial Jerusalem, life-size depictions of the Patriarchs of Israel, the Apostles and the Martyrs, among golden pillars lined with gemstones.
A site-specific installation, conceived for the space of the agora, and which at the same time is a preview of the exhibition that Adrian Paci will hold at Mudec next Spring.
Created to enhance the museum’s collections, the exhibition displays a collection of “exotic” artefacts brought from different parts of the world by Milanese citizens, enthusiasts, businessmen, travellers, researchers.
A visual journey into intimacy and identity with Jess T. Dugan’s powerful portraits at Gallerie d’Italia – Milan. Love, solitude, and belonging come to life through photography.
Nature, memory, and rebirth: history according to Nico Vascellari
With an intense and deeply evocative vision, the artist reinterprets the history of the Hall of the Caryatids, a place steeped in memory, transforming it into a space for reflection on the relationship between nature, memory and rebirth.