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Ferdinando Fuga

Ferdinando Fuga
Santa Maria Maggiore (Rome) frontview.jpg
Façade (1743) of Santa Maria Maggiore, Rome.
Born (1699-11-11)November 11, 1699
Florence
Died February 7, 1782(1782-02-07) (aged 82)
Naples
Nationality Italian
Occupation Architect

Ferdinando Fuga (1699–1782) was an Italian architect, born in Florence, known for his work in Rome and Naples. Much of his early work was in Rome, notably, the Palazzo della Consulta (1732–7) at the Quirinal, the Palazzo Corsini (1736–54), the façade of the Santa Maria Maggiore (1741–3), and the Church of Sant'Apollinare (1742–8). He later moved to Naples and notably designed the Albergo de'Poveri (an enormous work-house) (1751–81), the façade of the Chiesa dei Gerolomini, and that of the Palazzo Giordano (both c.1780,).

After studying under Giovanni Battista Foggini, Fuga settled in Rome in 1718. Throughout the 1720s he worked on three projects: submitting a design for the Trevi Fountain in1723, and 2 designs for facades for the churches San Giovanni in Laterano, 1723, and Santa Maria sopra Minerva, 1725. In 1730, after a brief stay in Naples, Fuga was commissioned by Pope Clement XII to design his family home Palazzo Corsini, Rome and then later to build the Coffee House of the Quirinal Palace as a reception room for Benedict XIV Lambertini,

His first significant work was in Naples. He was commissioned to design the richly decorated chapel in Palazzo Cellamare in Via Chiaia, and its rusticated gate to the gardens with a scrolling pediment and a sculptured cartouche of arms, (1726—1727); Fuga's patron was the infamous ambassador, Antonio del Giudice, Prince of Cellamare. Fuga also travelled to Palermo in 1729-1730 in connection with a projected bridge over the Milicia.


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