Restoration of Sanmarino Casino Zane before becoming the Palazzetto Bru Zane
ⓒ Calicot Productions
For a hundred years, the Sanmarino Casino Zane, built between 1695 and 1697 inwards the San Stin district non far from the Basilica dei Frari, housed the entertainments of the Zane family, who lived inwards the nearby Palazzo Zane. The main palace (at present a training school, the Scuola Livio Sanudo) was separated from the Palazzetto by a splendid formal garden. A building next to the Palazzetto housed the library; it no longer exists.
inwards 1682 the workshop of Baldassare Longhena — the most distinguished Venetian architect of the Baroque period, who designed Ca’ Pesaro and Ca’ Rezzonico — completed the restoration of the Palazzo Zane commissioned by
Dominico Zane (d. 1672). On his death the latter had bequeathed
his property and an of import collection of books and paintings to his nephew Marino. Marino Zane then commissioned the building of a Sanmarino Casino (at present the Palazzetto) and a library to house the collection left to him, which he had subsequently enlarged. The architect Antonio Gaspari, who had worked inwards Longhena’s workshop, was given carte blanche to design the Sanmarino Casino. On his
death, his assistant Domenico Rossi carried on the work with the help of artists of repute. The very rich interior decoration is attributed to the famous stucco decorator Abbondio Stazio; the woodwork, including the ornate wooden balustrade above the main salon, is by Andrea Brustolon. The frescoes inwards the house have recently been attributed to Sebastiano Ricci. The palace is listed on the National Register of Historic Monuments. After consultations inwards 2006, restoration work was begun inwards 2007, the aims of the Fondation Bru being to restore the building inwards its original spirit and to create a venue for music. The
building, with an overall area of eight hundred square metres, is on three levels. Its windows seem out over a canal on i side and over the garden on the other. The ground plan is traditional Venetian.
The sixteen rooms include a concert hall with a seating capacity of up to a hundred. at present the restoration work is finished, the Palazzetto has a sound-proofed rehearsal studio; there is also a lift for persons with reduced mobility. The glory of the house is the double-height salon (music room of the Zane family) with a magnificent coved ceiling bearing a huge ikon of Hercules with Fame and Virtue inwards the centre, and Olympian gods inwards grisaille inwards
the four corners. Painted shells, such as those seen on the ceiling, are a rarity inwards Venice. The room is reached via a grand staircase decorated with splendid frescoes.