Portal of the Certosa, Certosa di Pavia, Pavia, Lombardy, Italy, Europe
The church is built on a
Latin cross plan, with a nave, two aisles and transept, typical of
Gothic architecture. The chancel terminates with an apse. It is covered by crossed vaults on
Gothic arches and is inspired, on a reduced scale, by the
Duomo of Milan. The vaults are alternatively decorated with geometrical shapes and starry skies. The transept and the main chapel end with square-plan chapels with smaller, semi-circular apses on three sides. The façade of the church is famous for its exuberant decorations, typical of
Lombard architecture, every part being decorated with reliefs, inlaid marble and statues. Sculptors who worked on it include
Cristoforo Mantegazza and
Giovanni Antonio Amadeo himself. In addition to applied sculpture, the facade itself has a rich sculptural quality because of the contrast between richly textured surfaces, projecting buttresses, horizontal courses and arched openings, some of which are shadowed, while those in the small belfries are open to the sky. The sober form of the roughly finished brick front can be seen in a fresco by
Ambrogio Bergognone in the apse of the right transept, painted in 1492-1495, when work was commencing on the new facade, portraying
Gian Galeazzo Visconti offering the model of the Certosa to the
Blessed Virgin. Its profile, with roofs on three levels, has been compared to the churches of
San Giovanni in
Monza and
San Petronio in
Bologna; among the architects in close correspondence at all three projects, Borlini ascribes the form of the original facade at the Certosa to Giacomo da
Campione, who was working at
Pavia while his uncle Matteo was completing San Giovanni in Monza. The architect
Giovanni Solari, in building the double row of arcades down the flanks of the church, modified its appearance. After his death he was succeeded in Pavia by his son
Guiniforte Solari, but work came to a halt with the death of Guiniforte in 1478. In
1492 Gian Giacomo Dolcebuono took up the construction, assisted on site, for he was cocurrently occupied with the cathedrals at Pavia and at
Milan and other churches, by his inseparable collaborator on both cathedrals, Giovanni Antonio Amadeo. In their hands the project was thoroughly redesigned.
Scores of artists were involved. The classicist style portal is by
Benedetto Briosco (1501). The porch has a large arch of classicist form resting on paired
Corinthian columns which are each surmounted by a very strongly modelled cornice on which the arch rests, the construction being derived from the
Classical, used by Brunelleschi, and employed here for a bold and striking effect. The decoration is of bas-reliefs illustrating the
History of the Certosa.
Above the central arch is a shallow balcony of three arches, above which rises the central window. This campaign was interrupted in 1519 as work was going forward by the condition of
French occupation in Lombardy after the War of the
League of Cambrai. French troops were encamped round the Certosa. Notations of work on the facade did not resume until 1554, when a revised design under the direction of Cristoforo Lombardo was approved for the completion of the facade above the second arcade; there marble intarsia was substituted for the rich sculptual decorations of the lower area. Some final details were added by
Galeazzo Alessi. Gian Galeazzo Visconti, hereditary lord and first
Duke of Milan, commissioned the building of the Certosa to the architect
Marco Solari, inaugurating the works and laying the foundation stone on August 27, 1396, as recorded by a bas-relief on the facade. The location was strategically chosen midway between Milan and Pavia, the second city of the
Duchy, where the
Duke held his court. The church, the last edifice of the complex to be built, was to be the family mausoleum of the Visconti. It was designed as a grand structure with a nave and two aisles, a type unusual for the
Carthusian Order. The nave, in the
Gothic style, was completed in 1465. However, since the foundation, the
Renaissance had spread in
Italy, and the rest of the edifice was built according to the new style, redesigned by Giovanni Solari continued by his son Guiniforte Solari and including some new cloisters.
Solari was followed as director of the works by Giovanni Antonio Amadeo, (1481-1499). The church was consecrated on May 3, 1497. The lower part of the façade was not completed until 1507. The construction contract obliged the monks to use part of the revenue of the lands held in benefice to the monastery to continue to improve the edifice. Consequently, the Certosa includes a huge collection of artworks of all centuries from the 15th to the 18th.