Via Duomo, the Path of Museums
Via Duomo: the way of museums (and not only). Art, culture, history: the historic centre with all of its assets at hand. Art, culture, history: the old town with all of its assets at hand. Shopping, services, restaurants all over the house. Central Railway Station and the maritime station for boats to the islands and the Sorrento and the Amalfi coast are both at 1500 meters.
Museo Cappella Sansevero
The Sansevero Chapel Museum in the historic heart of Naples is a jewel of the world’s artistic heritage. With its masterpieces such as the famous Veiled Christ, renowned world over for the remarkable tissue-like quality of the marble, feats of virtuosity such as Disillusion, and enigmatic creations such as the Anatomical Machines, the Sansevero Chapel is one of the most impressive monuments that the human mind has ever conceived. A noble mausoleum, a temple of initiation, which admirably reflects the multi-faceted personality of its ingenious architect, Raimondo di Sangro, seventh Prince of Sansevero. The Veiled Christ is one of the most famous and impressive works of art in the world. It was the Prince’s wish that the statue be made by Antonio Corradini, who had already done Modesty for him. However, Corradini died in 1752 and only managed to make a terracotta scale model of the Christ, which is now preserved in the Museo di San Martino. So Raimondo di Sangro appointed a young Neapolitan artist, Giuseppe Sanmartino, to make “a life-sized marble statue, representing Our Lord Jesus Christ dead, and covered in a transparent shroud carved from the same block as the statue”.
Museo Madre
The Madre · museo d’arte contemporanea Donnaregina is located in the heart of old Naples, on what is known as the “Via dei Musei,” just a stone’s throw away from the Duomo, the Museo Archeologico Nazionale and the Accademia di Belle Arti, where the ancient San Lorenzo district is situated.
The Museum takes its name from the building that hosts it, the Palazzo Donnaregina, which like all the surrounding area owes its name to the Monastery of Santa Maria Donnaregina, founded by the Swabians (13th century) and then expanded and rebuilt in 1325 by Queen Mary of Hungary, wife to Charles II of Anjou. All that remains of the ancient monastic complex is the church of the same name, which overlooks Piazza Donnaregina, built in the Baroque period, and the “old” 14th-century Gothic-style church of Donnaregina, which has previously hosted exhibitions and special events organized by the Museum.
Underground Naples - "Napoli Sotterranea"
The other side of Naples.
Every era, from the foundation of the Neapolis to the bombs of the Second World War, has left its mark on the walls of yellow tuff, stone with which the city is built.
Forty meters below the vocal and characteristic streets of the historic center of Naples, there is a world apart, still very unexplored, isolated in its quiet millenary yet closely connected to the city. It is the womb of Naples, from which she herself was born.
Visiting it means taking a journey through time two thousand and four hundred years.